| Literature DB >> 35819002 |
Yawei Gao1, Kunpeng Wang1, Xiao-Mao Wang1, Xia Huang1.
Abstract
To enhance the use of nanofiltration in the production of quality drinking water, particularly through the efficient removal of micropollutants yet still preserving essential minerals, the targeted nanofiltration membranes (NFMs) are required to have small pore dimensions coupled with a high, net-negative charge density. Herein, after the formation of a separation layer using piperazine interfacially polymerized with trimesoyl chloride, the exploitation of residual amine groups was systematically investigated by different diacyl chlorides in an organic milieu, which caused the upper part of the final separation layer to be denser and highly negatively charged. Hence, this protocol offers a novel means to fabricate NFMs simultaneously endowed with a low molecular cutoff (MWCO) of 145-238 Da and a reduced rejection of MgCl2 (48%-80%) as well as a competitive water permeance. Those features are ideally applicable to the goal of removing small micropollutants while preserving mineral ions, as needed for the energy-efficient production of safe, quality drinking water. Furthermore, an attempt was made to correlate MWCO with MgCl2 rejection, which provides some insights on the nexus of the electrostatic effects constrained by size exclusion. The significance of residual amine groups and the modification environment was unveiled, and this method paves a new avenue for designing functional NFMs.Entities:
Keywords: micropollutants; multiacyl chloride; nanofiltration; organic amine modification; potable water; selective rejection
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35819002 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c02410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 11.357