| Literature DB >> 33729764 |
Yizhou Zhang1, Ruiqi Dong1, Uri R Gabinet1, Ryan Poling-Skutvik1, Na Kyung Kim1, Changyeon Lee1, Omar Q Imran1, Xunda Feng2, Chinedum O Osuji1.
Abstract
Nanostructured materials with precisely defined and water-bicontinuous 1-nm-scale pores are highly sought after as advanced materials for next-generation nanofiltration membranes. While several self-assembled systems appear to satisfy this need, straightforward fabrication of such materials as submicron films with high-fidelity retention of their ordered nanostructure represents a nontrivial challenge. We report the development of a lyotropic liquid crystal mesophase that addresses the aforementioned issue. Films as thin as ∼200 nm are prepared on conventional support membranes using solution-based methods. Within these films, the system is composed of a hexagonally ordered array of ∼3 nm diameter cylinders of cross-linked polymer, embedded in an aqueous medium. The cylinders are uniformly oriented in the plane of the film, providing a transport-limiting dimension of ∼1 nm, associated with the space between the outer surfaces of nearest-neighbor cylinders. These membranes exhibit molecular weight cutoffs of ∼300 Da for organic solutes and are effective in rejecting dissolved salts, and in particular, divalent species, while exhibiting water permeabilities that rival or exceed current state-of-the-art commercial nanofiltration membranes. These materials have the ability to address a broad range of nanofiltration applications, while structure-property considerations suggest several avenues for potential performance improvements.Entities:
Keywords: desalination; liquid-crystal membranes; lyotropic mesophase; nanochannel; nanofiltration; self-assembly; thin film
Year: 2021 PMID: 33729764 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c00722
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881