RO Membranes with Tunable Thickness to Eliminate the Drawbacks of Desal Technology
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Technology
Using an additive manufacturing approach that employs electrospraying, researchers at the University of Connecticut were able to create ultra-thin, ultra-smooth polyamide membranes that are less prone to fouling and may require less power to move water through them.
“Today’s membranes for reverse osmosis are not made in a way that allows their properties to be controlled,” says Jeffrey McCutcheon, study author and UConn School of Engineering’s Al Geib Professor of Environmental Engineering Research and Education. “Our approach uses an ‘additive’ technique that allows for control of a membrane’s fundamental properties such as thickness and roughness, which is currently impossible using conventional methods.”
While the use of reverse osmosis continues to rise around the world, many of its drawbacks, which include high energy consumption and a propensity for membranes to foul, continue to plague the industry.
A schematic illustration -- both top and side view -- of the 3-D printing electrospray process used to create extremely smooth thin film composite membranes that was developed in the McCutcheon Lab at the University of Connecticut. Needles loaded with solution of two monomers - m-phenylene diamine (MPD) and trimesoyl chloride (TMC) - use electrospraying to apply a fine layer of material to a substrate attached to a rotating drum. The monomers react upon contact to form an extremely smooth and thin polyamide film. Roughness and thickness can be adjusted by increasing or decreasing the monomer concentration in the solution and by applying additional layers of monomers on the rotating drum. Credit: Maqsud R. Chowdhury/McCutcheon Lab.
The traditional approach to making these membranes is known as interfacial polymerization. This method relies on a self-terminating reaction between an aqueous phase amine and an organic phase acid chloride monomer. The resulting polyamide films — exceedingly thin, highly selective, and permeable to water — became the gold standard membrane for reverse osmosis.
However, as the field has advanced, the need to better control this reaction to allow for membranes of varying thickness and roughness to optimize water flow and reduce fouling has become more pressing.
UConn’s method provides a superior level of control over the thickness and roughness of the polyamide membrane, says McCutcheon.
Typical polyamide membranes have a thickness between 100 and 200 nanometers (nm) that cannot be controlled. UConn’s electrospray method allows for the controlled creation of membranes as thin as 15 nm and the capacity to control membrane thickness in 4 nm increments, a level of specificity not seen before in this area. Likewise, typical RO membranes have a roughness of over 80 nm. UConn researchers were able to create membranes with roughness as low as 2 nm.
“Our printing approach to making polyamide membranes has the additional benefit of being scalable,” McCutcheon says. “Much like electrospinning has seen dramatic improvements in roll-to-roll processing, electrospraying can be scaled with relative ease.”
The authors also say this type of manufacturing could save on chemical consumption as traditional chemical baths are not needed as part of the membrane fabrication process.
“In the lab, we use 95 percent less chemical volume making membranes by printing when compared to conventional interfacial polymerization,” says McCutcheon. “These benefits would be magnified in large-scale membrane manufacturing and make the process more ‘green’ than it has been for the past 40 years.”
This innovative new approach is not limited to desalination and could lead to better membranes for other separation processes, says McCutcheon, who also serves as the executive director of the Fraunhofer USA Center for Energy Innovation at UConn, which develops new applied membrane technologies. “In fact, we hope that this method will enable new materials to be considered for a myriad of membrane separation processes, perhaps in processes where those materials were not, or could not, be used before.”
The Paper : M.R. Chowdhury el al., " 3D printed polyamide membranes for desalination ," Science (2018). science.sciencemag.org/cgi/doi … 1126/science.aar2122
Source: UConn Today
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