| Literature DB >> 28895877 |
Jinxia Ma1, Dan Ping2, Xinfa Dong3.
Abstract
Membrane-based separation technology has attracted great interest in many separation fields due to its advantages of easy-operation, energy-efficiency, easy scale-up, and environmental friendliness. The development of novel membrane materials and membrane structures is an urgent demand to promote membrane-based separation technology. Graphene oxide (GO), as an emerging star nano-building material, has showed great potential in the membrane-based separation field. In this review paper, the latest research progress in GO-based membranes focused on adjusting membrane structure and enhancing their mechanical strength as well as structural stability in aqueous environment is highlighted and discussed in detail. First, we briefly reviewed the preparation and characterization of GO. Then, the preparation method, characterization, and type of GO-based membrane are summarized. Finally, the advancements of GO-based membrane in adjusting membrane structure and enhancing their mechanical strength, as well as structural stability in aqueous environment, are particularly discussed. This review hopefully provides a new avenue for the innovative developments of GO-based membrane in various membrane applications.Entities:
Keywords: graphene oxide; graphene oxide membrane; membrane; separation performance; structural stability
Year: 2017 PMID: 28895877 PMCID: PMC5618137 DOI: 10.3390/membranes7030052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Membranes (Basel) ISSN: 2077-0375
Figure 1Structure mode of graphene oxide [23]. Copyright 2015 Journal of the Physical Society of Japan.
Figure 2Numbers of publication for GO and GO-based membranes reported between 2008 and 2017 (topic keywords “graphene” and “graphene oxide membrane” searched from web of science), data updated by August, 2017.
Figure 3Schematic illustration of GO preparation process.
Methods for the preparation of GO.
| Oxidant | Method | Acid | Reaction Time | Interlayer Spacing | C:O Ratio | Note | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KClO3 | Brodie | HNO3 | 3–4 days | 5.95 Å | 2.16 | Toxic gas ClO2 | [ |
| Staudenmaier | HNO3, H2SO4 | 1–10 days | 6.23 Å | 1.85 | Toxic gas ClO2, NO | [ | |
| Hofmann | HNO3, H2SO4 | 4 days | – | – | Toxic gas ClO2, NO | [ | |
| KMnO4 | Hummers | NaNO3, H2SO4 | ≈2 h | 6.67 Å | 2.25 | Toxic gas NO | [ |
| Modified Hummers | K2S2O8, P2O5, H2SO4 | 8 h | 6.9 Å | 2.3 | – | [ | |
| Improved Hummers | 9:1 | ≈12 h | 9.3 Å | – | Mn2+ in GO | [ | |
| K2FeO4 | Iron-based green method | H2SO4 | 1 h | 9.0 Å | 2.2 | Fe3+ in GO | [ |
Methods for the characterization of GO.
| Name | Characterization Method | Characterization Information | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Micromorphology and size of GO | SEM | Lateral size distribution of GO sheets, observe the structural morphology of GO | [ |
| TEM | Morphology of GO (wrinkles), monolayer character of GO sheets | [ | |
| AFM | Lateral size and thickness of GO sheets | [ | |
| Thermal stability | TGA | Thermal stability of GO | [ |
| Chemical structure of GO | XPS | Quantitatively analyze the chemistry composition of GO | [ |
| ICP-MS | Chemistry composition of GO, identified the metal ion content in GO | [ | |
| FTIR | Characteristic bands corresponding to oxygen functional groups, confirmed the successful synthesis of GO | [ | |
| XRD | Crystalline structures of the GO nanosheets, inter-sheet distance of GO, confirmed the successful synthesis of GO | [ | |
| Raman spectroscopy | Analyze the chemical structure of GO combined with XPS, FTIR, XRD, ICP-MS | [ | |
| Electrochemical property | Zeta potential measurement | GO nanosheets are negatively charged over a wide pH range | [ |
Methods for the preparation of GO membranes.
| Method | Description | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Filtration-assisted | Vacuum filtration | Good nanoscale control over the membrane thickness; laminar structure of GO membranes is dictated by the filtration force; highly scalable |
| Pressure filtration | ||
| Casting/coating-based | Spinning-casting/coating | Nonuniform deposition of GO nanosheets; poor control over the membrane thickness; producing highly continuous GO membranes; highly scalable |
| Drop-casting | ||
| Dip-coating | ||
| Spray-coating | ||
| Doctor blade-casting | ||
| LbL assembly | Layer-by-layer assembly | Easily control of the GO layer number, packing, and thickness |
| Others | Hybrid approach | Easily control of the GO assembly, industrial-scalability, rapid throughput. |
| Evaporation-assembled method | Scale-up, easily control of the membrane thickness and size | |
| Templating method | – | |
| Langmuir–Blodgett (LB) assembly | Producing highly uniform, close-packed monolayered GO membrane | |
| Shear-alignment method | Scale-up, industrial-scalability, producing large-area GO membrane, rapid throughput |
Figure 4Schematic diagrams of the preparation of GO-based membranes through different approaches: (a) Filtration-assisted self-assembly and evaporation-assisted self-assembly technique [43]. Copyright 2015 Elsevier; (b) PASA technique [28]. Copyright 2014 Elsevier; (c) Modified spin-coating technique [46]. Copyright 2008 American Chemical Society; (d) LbL assembly via electrostatic interaction [47]. Copyright 2014 Elsevier; (e) Spray-evaporation assembled technique [48]. Copyright 2016 Elsevier.
Methods for the characterization of GO membrane.
| Characterization Method | Characterization Information | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Surface Zeta potential | Identified the surface charges of membrane | [ |
| Stress–strain curves | Mechanical stability of the membrane, tensile strength, Young’s modulus | [ |
| SEM | Surface morphology and cross-section structure | [ |
| AFM | Surface roughness of membrane, membrane uniformity | [ |
| CA | Surface hydrophilic or hydrophobic property of membrane | [ |
| FTIR | Chemical structure of membrane, surface functional groups of membrane | [ |
| XPS | Quantitatively analyze the elemental compositions of membrane | [ |
| Raman spectroscopy | Identified the existence of GO in composite membrane | [ |
| TGA | Thermal stability of membrane | [ |
| TEM | Surface morphology and cross-section structure | [ |
| XRD | Crystalline structures, d-spacing of membrane | [ |
| Integrated quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation and ellipsometry | Accurately measure the d-spacing of GO membranes in an aqueous environment | [ |
Application and separation performance of GO-based membranes.
| Types of GO Membrane | Name of GO Membrane | Fabrication Method | Application | Membrane Performance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free-standing | GO membrane | Flow-directed self-assembly | – | Elastic modulus: 32 GPa | [ |
| GO membrane | Evaporation-driven LbL self-assembly | – | Elastic modulus: 12.7 GPa | [ | |
| Cross-linked GO membrane | Vacuum filtration | Ion dialysis separation | Elastic modulus: 10.5402 GPa | [ | |
| GOP nanohybrid membrane | Vacuum filtration | Oil/water separation | Water flux: 1869 L/m2/h | [ | |
| GO membrane | Self-assembly under ambient condition | – | Tensile strength: 46.20 MPa | [ | |
| GO membrane | Drop-casting | Ion penetration | Entirely blocked heavy-metal salt (e.g., copper sulfate) and organic contaminants (rhodamine B); low rejection of sodium salts | [ | |
| GO membrane | Pressurized ultrafiltration | Dehydration of 85 wt % ethanol | Water permeability: 13,800 Barrer | [ | |
| Supported | GO/PES | Spin-casting | Gas separation | CO2 permeability: 8500 Barrer | [ |
| GOF/Al2O3 | Vacuum filtration | 3.5 wt % seawater desalination | Water flux: 11.4 kg/m2/h | [ | |
| GO/mPAN | Pressure-assisted | Pervaporation of a 70 wt % IPA/water mixture | Permeation flux: 4137 g/m2/h | [ | |
| self-assembly | |||||
| GO/PAN | LbL assembly | Water purification | Water flux: 2.1–5.8 L/m2/h | [ | |
| GO/Nylon | Shear-alignment method | Water treatment | Water permeability: 71 ± 5 L/m2/bar/h | [ | |
| GO/PES | Vacuum filtration | Gas separation | CO2 permeance: 650 GPU | [ | |
| GO/PES | Vacuum filtration | Humic acid removal | Rejection: 85.3–93.9% | [ | |
| IRMOF-3/GO/PDA-PSF | Dip-coating | Heavy-metal removal | Water flux: 31 L/m2/h | [ | |
| GO/ceramic | Dip-coating | Pervaporation separation of water/ethanol mixtures | Total flux: 461.86 g/m2/h | [ | |
| GO/Al2O3 | Vacuum filtration | 3.5 wt % seawater desalination | Water flux: 48.4 kg/m2/h | [ | |
| GO-modified | GO/PSF | Phase inversion | Water purification | water flux: 353.5 L/m2/bar/h | [ |
| GO/PSF | Phase inversion | Water treatment | Water flux: 450 L/m2/h | [ | |
| GO/PESc | LbL | Water treatment | Water flux: 7.1 kg/m2/MPa/h | [ | |
| Self-assembly | |||||
| Pebax/GO/PVDF | Dip-coating | Gas separation | N2 permeance: 9.6 GPU | [ | |
| GO/H-PAN | Electrospinning | Oil/water separation | Water flux: 3500 L/m2/h | [ | |
| GO/APAN | – | Oil/water separation | Water flux: 10,000 L/m2/h | [ | |
| GO/PEI/DPAN | Dip-coating | Solvent resistant NF | Ethanol flux: 10.8 L/m2/h | [ | |
| – | GO/PES | Phase inversion | Water treatment | Water flux: 20.4 kg/m2/h | [ |
Figure 5Schematic diagram of the process tuned the structure of GO membrane by physical method: (a) The fabrication process of CD–GO membranes [93]. Copyright 2014 Royal Society of Chemistry; (b) The preparation process of the SWCNT-intercalated GO ultrathin membrane [94]. Copyright 2015 Royal Society of Chemistry; (c) The fabrication process of the GOP membranes [60]. Copyright 2016 American Chemistry Society; (d) The fabrication process of the MOF@GO Membranes via PASA technique [95]. Copyright 2017 American Chemistry Society.
Figure 6Schematic illustration of possible arrangement of C16TAB within GO membranes: (a) The pure GO membrane; (b) Two C16TAB paralleled to GO plane; (c) Two C16TAB perpendicularly arranged to GO laminate plane; (d) Molecular structure of C16TAB with C1–N chain length about 1.99 nm [96]. Copyright 2017 Elsevier.
Figure 7Schematic diagram of the process to tune the structure of GO membrane by chemical method: (a) Schematic illustration of the process to tune the microstructure of GO membranes via reduction method [24]. Copyright 2016 Royal Society of Chemistry; (b) The fabrication process of NSC–GO membrane [88]. Copyright 2013 Nature Publishing Group; (c) The fabrication process of GOF membranes cross-linked with diamine monomers [110]. Copyright 2014 American Chemistry Society; (d) The fabrication process of GOF membrane [27]. Copyright 2016 Elsevier.
Figure 8Schematic diagrams of transport path of (a) Original GO; (b) Mesoporous GO membrane; (c) The separation property of mesoporous GO membrane [114]. Copyright 2014 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 9Schematic diagram of the process for improving separation performance of GO membranes: (a) Schematic illustration of the integrated GO membrane combined an ultrathin surface water-capturing polymeric layer with GO layers [116]. Copyright 2015 John Wiley and Sons; (b) Schematic illustration of the process to tune 2D channels of GO membrane with external force [55]. Copyright 2016 American Chemistry Society.
Figure 10Schematic illustration of (a) The forming process of the GO membrane; (b) The interaction mechanism between PDA and TMC; (c) The interaction mechanism between GO and TMC [26]. Copyright 2013 American Chemistry Society.
Figure 11(a) Schematic illustration of the interfacial interaction in GO-based hybrid membrane [121] Copyright 2015 Elsevier; (b) Schematic illustration of the formation of covalent bonding between adjacent TA–GO sheets [124]. Copyright 2016 Elsevier.
Figure 12Left: Schematic diagram of the formation of covalent bonding between GO sheets and borate ion. (a) Water molecules bound the GO sheets through hydrogen bond; (b) Borate anions bound to the GO sheets through covalent bond; (c) More covalent bonds formed within the GO sheets after thermal annealing. Right: Mechanical strength of respective films [49]. Copyright 2011 John Wiely and Sons.