| Literature DB >> 32283851 |
Denis Lebedev1, Maxim Novomlinsky1, Vladimir Kochemirovsky1, Ilya Ryzhkov2,3, Irina Anfimova4, Maxim Panov1, Tatyana Antropova4.
Abstract
Nanocomposite membranes have been actively developed in the last decade. The involvement of nanostructures can improve the permeability, selectivity, and anti-fouling properties of a membrane for improved filtration processes. In this work, we propose a novel type of ion-selective Glass/Au composite membrane based on porous glass (PG), which combines the advantages of porous media and promising selective properties. The latter are achieved by depositing gold nanoparticles into the membrane pores by the laser-induced liquid phase chemical deposition technique. Inside the pores, gold nanoparticles with an average diameter 25 nm were formed, which was confirmed by optical and microscopic studies. To study the transport and selective properties of the PG/Au composite membrane, the potentiometric method was applied. The uniform potential model was used to determine the surface charge from the experimental data. It was found that the formation of gold nanoparticles inside membrane pores leads to an increase in the surface charge from -2.75 mC/m2 to -5.42 mC/m2. The methods proposed in this work allow the creation of a whole family of composite materials based on porous glasses. In this case, conceptually, the synthesis of these materials will differ only in the selection of initial precursors.Entities:
Keywords: gold nanoparticles; ion transport; laser synthesis; membrane; modelling; porous glass
Year: 2020 PMID: 32283851 PMCID: PMC7178654 DOI: 10.3390/ma13071767
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1(a) Scanning electron microscope image of a porous glass surface; (b) Experimental setup for LCLD.
Figure 2The scheme of potentiometric experimental setup.
Figure 3Scanning electron microscope image of a cover glass surface with the LCLD-synthesized Au nanoparticles under different conditions: (a,b) exposure time—1 min, solution concentration—1 mM; (c) exposure time—5 min, solution concentration—1 mM; (d) exposure time—5 min, solution concentration—5 mM.
Figure 4(a) SEM image of the cross-section of the Glass/Au composite membrane obtained in “solution-side” irradiation geometry; (b) snapshot of the obtained membrane samples; (c,d) SEM image of the cross-section of the Glass/Au composite membrane obtained by multiple irradiation technique.
Figure 5(a) Spectrum of characteristic X-ray emission of Glass/Au composite membrane; (b) Optical absorption spectrum of a pure PG membrane (blue line), and Glass/Au composite membranes with gold nanoparticles (red line).
Figure 6Dependence of the membrane potential on the logarithm of the ratio of solution concentrations on both sides of the synthesized membrane (points—experimental data; lines—the results of mathematical modeling).
Surface charge and diffusion boundary layer thickness calculated by different models for the studied membranes.
| Membrane Type | Model | Surface Charge |
|---|---|---|
| PG membrane | 1D UP model | −2.36 mC/m2 |
| PG/Au composite membrane | 1D UP model | −5.42 mC/m2 |