4.7 Article

On negative retentions in organic solvent nanofiltration

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE
Volume 447, Issue -, Pages 57-65

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.memsci.2013.06.009

Keywords

Organic solvent nanofiltration; Negative retention; Solvent resistant nanofiltration

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01RC1001D]
  2. Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation

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Some recent literature reports negative retentions in organic solvent nanofiltration. However, this phenomenon is little understood and requires systematic evaluation. The aim of this work is to extend the systematic investigations of solute transport through a dense PDMS-based polymeric OSN membrane. Experiments with four different solute classes, namely polyethylene glycol (194-590 Da), linear carboxylic acid (228-340 Da) polystyrene (MW=741 Da) and n-alkanes (142-339 Da) were performed. These solutes are dissolved in n-hexane, toluene, isopropanol or methanol. Depending on the solvent and the solute, there exist considerable differences in retentive behavior. Above mentioned negative retentions could be observed for linear carboxylic acids or n-alkane as solutes dissolved in isopropanol or methanol. The generally observed positive retention was measured for polyethylene glycol and polystyrene as solute. This systematic investigation proofs that strong solute-solvent-membrane interactions can cause a solubility determined solute transport resulting in upconcentration of the larger solute into the permeate. The surprising observation of larger transport rates for the larger solute molecules correlates with the growing contribution of the increasing partial molar volume to the chemical potential.(c) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

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