http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/2014/10/persistent-foams-oceanic-mirrors-albedo

Mirror mirror on the ocean

30 October 2014
Dannielle Whittaker

Long-life foams that can act as oceanic mirrors are being explored by
scientists in the UK. These reflective foams could one day ease global
warming by managing incoming solar radiation.

Planetary albedo is the proportion of sunlight reflected by Earth’s
surface; two main areas contribute – land and ocean. Oceanic albedo is
primarily caused by naturally occurring bubbles or foams produced by
surface waves called whitecaps. They create an oceanic mirror but without
them, ocean reflectance is only around 5%. Whitecaps, however, are
short-lived, urging research into persistent foams that boost albedo.
Julian Evans’ group at University College London have been investigating
just that. They found that protein only solutions gave reflective foams
with insufficiently short lifetimes. However, adding high methyl ester (HM)
pectin to type A gelatin created a foam with a lifetime of 12 weeks in salt
water and a reflectance comparable to that of whitecaps at 50–54%.

Evans says the problem with ocean foam is it needs a lot of energy to make
and doesn't last long: ‘So everything depends on its lifetime. We have been
looking at additives that could, at around the 1wt% level, be used to make
long-lived foams.’ Combining methyl cellulose with polysaccharides from the
carrageenan family was also found to yield a long-lasting foam, held
together by electrostatic interactions, which is capable of achieving a
reflectance of 65–75%. Carrageenans are naturally found in red seaweeds,
thus limiting the inclusion of externally derived ingredients in the foam.

Biodegradable and non-toxic additives edge the technology closer to
application but an engineered oceanic mirror is still a long way off. Evans
explains that there is further work to be carried out investigating wave
action, gelation conditions and the use of ocean-sourced proteins.‘Among
the many emerging climate remediation strategies it is probably one of the
least damaging,’ he says, ‘but people want a solution to climate change
that has no costs, monetary or environmental, so I fear that they may be
disappointed.’

Nonetheless, experts in the field are excited by the study. Rossen Sedev, a
surfactant and colloidal systems researcher, from the University of South
Australia, describes the work as ‘a down-to-Earth sensible consideration of
what foam science could do to help us slow down the overheating of our
world.’ And complex fluids expert Ranjini Bandyopadhyay, from the Raman
Research Institute in Bangalore, India, says ‘this is another fantastic
example of how effectively complex fluid systems can be used to solve some
of the urgent problems that face us today.’

REFERENCES

This article is free to access until 10 December 2014. Download it here:A
Aziz et al, RSC Adv., 2014, 4, 53028 (DOI: 10.1039/c4ra08714c)

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