4.7 Article

Superhydrophobic-omniphobic membrane with anti-deformable pores for membrane distillation with excellent wetting resistance

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE
Volume 620, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.memsci.2020.118768

Keywords

Superhydrophobic-omniphobic surface; Anti-deformable pores; Membrane distillation; Membrane scaling; Electrospinning

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52000105, 51873047]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20200478]
  3. 67th batch of China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M671503]
  4. Scientific Research Foundation of Heilongjiang Prov. [YQ2020B003]
  5. Key Laboratory of Low-Carbon Conversion Science & Engineering, Shanghai Advanced Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences [KLLCCSE-201906]
  6. Applied Basic Research Program of Science and Technology Department of Sichuan Province [2018JY0302]

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A membrane with robust wetting resistance was developed by integrating superhydrophobic-omniphobic surface and anti-deformable pores. It exhibits excellent wetting resistance when concentrating high salinity solutions and the mechanism includes chemical stabilization of the surface-bound air layer and structural stabilization through anti-deformable pores.
Wetting induced by salt-scaling and surfactants is the Achilles heel of membrane distillation, especially for concentration of high salinity wastewater. Herein, we rationally developed a membrane with robust wetting resistance by integrating superhydrophobic-omniphobic surface and anti-deformable pores into one system. The membrane was first developed by electrospinning, which was then modified with surface roughness, and followed by coating of polydimethylsiloxane to weld the intersecting fibers and fluoroalkylsilane to lower the membrane surface energy. The product exhibits excellent wetting resistance when concentrating the high salinity NaCl solution from 20 to 38 wt% (saturation condition), the simulated reverse osmosis concentrated water, the gypsum and the low-surface-tension high salinity wastewater. Moreover, the mechanism of membrane wetting resistance was also systematically discussed based on the experiment and computer simulation. It reveals that the superhydmphobic-omniphobic surface could stabilize the surface-bound air layer chemically, thus reducing the contact of crystals and surfactant with the membrane surface. Simultaneously, the anti-deformable pore also helps it overcome the asymmetrical hydraulic disturbance on enlarging membrane pore size, thus stabilizes the surface-bound air layer structurally. The presented development will provide a platform to understand and achieve wetting and scaling inhibition MD membrane for high salinity wastewater treatment.

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