4.8 Article

Cross-Linked Covalent Organic Framework-Based Membranes with Trimesoyl Chloride for Enhanced Desalination

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 18, Pages 21379-21389

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c03628

Keywords

COF-based membrane; trimesoyl chloride; interfacial polymerization; desalination; cross-linked and stitched

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51708556]
  2. Science Foundation of China University of Petroleum, Beijing [2462019BJR004]

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This study presents a novel COF-based desalination membrane with improved NaCl rejection by in situ cross-linking of COF-TpPa layer, forming a porous network structure on the membrane surface. The membrane exhibited excellent desalting performance for both low and high salinity industrial wastewater.
The rational design of continuous covalent organic framework (COF)-based membranes is challenging for desalination applications, mainly due to the larger intrinsic pore size of COFs and defects in the crystalline film, which lead to a negligible NaCl rejection ratio. In this work, we first demonstrated a COF-based desalination membrane with in situ cross-linking of a COF-TpPa layer by trimesoyl chloride (TMC) to stitch the defects between COF crystals and cross-link the COF cavity with high-cross-linking degree networks to enhance NaCl rejection. With the addition of TMC monomers, both small spherical nodules and some elongated leaf-like features were observed on the membrane surface due to the appearance of nanovoids during cross-linking. The resulting COF-based desalination membrane had a water permeability of approximately 0.81 L m(-2) h(-1) bar(-1) and offered substantial enhancement of the NaCl rejection ratio from being negligible to 93.3% at 5 bar. Mechanistic analysis indicated that the amidation reaction of the secondary amine in keto COF with TMC induced the formation of a highly porous network structure both in the cavity and on the exterior of COF, thereby successfully forming a continuous and nanovoid-containing selective layer for desalination. In addition, the membrane exhibited excellent desalting performance for real industrial wastewater with both low and high salinity. This study proposed that the introduction of a cross-linker to react with the terminal amine group and secondary amine in the backbone of the keto form of COF or its derivatives could provide a facile and scalable approach to fabricate a COF-based membrane with superior NaCl rejection. This opens a new fabrication route for COF-based desalination membranes, as well as extended applications in water desalination.

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