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Spray coating polymer substrates from a green solvent to enhance desalination performances of thin film composites

Version 2 2024-03-13, 10:03
Version 1 2023-12-20, 12:33
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 10:03 authored by S. Lin, S. He, S. Sarwar, R.A. Milescu, Con McElroyCon McElroy, S. Dimartino, L. Shao, C.H. Lau

Toxic solvents like n,n-dimethylformamide (DMF), n,n-dimethylethanamide (DMAc), and 1-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) are commonly used to fabricate polymer support membranes. Replacing these toxic solvents with green solvents such as Cyrene™ can imbue sustainability into membrane fabrication, but at the expense of poor membrane separation performances. Here we overcome this limitation by spray coating Cyrene™-based polymer dope solutions to form highly porous asymmetric membranes. The pure water permeance of spray-coated polyethersulfone (PES) membranes reached 68.9 L m?2 h?1 bar?1, 7-fold higher than knife cast membranes. This significant increase in permeance was ascribed to a porous, thin skin layer and macrovoids interconnected with finger-like pores in spray-coated PES films. However, this did not impact on the ability to yield thin film composites (TFCs) with high separation performances. Through interfacial polymerisation, we deposited a polyamide selective layer on to the surface of spray-coated PES films to yield TFCs for desalination of a 2000 ppm NaCl solution. The salt rejection rate and permeance of such TFCs reached 93% and 1.76 L m?2 h?1 bar?1, respectively. This desalination performance was similar to knife cast membranes produced from DMF-, NMP- and DMAc-based polymer dope solutions, but fabricated here in a more sustainable manner. This indicated that spray coating can overcome the trade-off between poor membrane separation performance and sustainability. © 2023 The Royal Society of Chemistry.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Chemistry (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Materials Chemistry A: materials for energy and sustainability

Volume

11

Issue

2

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

ISSN

2050-7488

eISSN

2050-7496

Date Submitted

2023-05-22

Date Accepted

2022-11-25

Date of First Publication

2022-11-25

Date of Final Publication

2023-01-14

ePrints ID

54727