4.7 Article

A nonionic polymer-brush-grafted PVDF membrane to analyse fouling during the filtration of oil/water emulsions

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE
Volume 637, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.memsci.2021.119644

Keywords

PACMO; surface-initiated ATRP; Oil; water separation; fouling mechanism; electrostatic interaction

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foun-dation of China [51973158]
  2. Tianjin Natural Science Foundation [18JCZDJC99500]
  3. Science and Technol-ogy Plans of Tianjin [17PTSYJC00040, 18PTSYJC00180]

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In this study, a nonionic poly(N-acryloyl morpholine)-brush-grafted-poly (vinylidene fluoride) membrane (PVDF-g-PACMO) with high hydrophilicity and high permeation was successfully fabricated via surface-initiated atom transfer radical polymerisation (ATRP) to separate various surfactant-stabilised emulsions. Membrane fouling behavior varied for anionic, nonionic, and cationic surfactant-stabilised emulsions, with anionic surfactants causing severe fouling due to electrostatic repulsion, while nonionic and cationic surfactants exhibited reduced irreversible fouling. The study also revealed that the oppositely charged surface potentials of the PVDF-g-PACMO membranes compared to that of the oil/water emulsions assist in mitigating irreversible fouling.
Hydrophilic polymer brushes on membrane surfaces can alleviate fouling during the separation of oil/water emulsions; the charged moieties on the polymer brushes presumably interact with charged surfactants and weaken the membrane fouling behaviour. However, the oil-repellence mechanism of nonionic polymer brushes has not been thoroughly examined. In this study, a nonionic poly(N-acryloyl morpholine)-brush-grafted-poly (vinylidene fluoride) membrane (PVDF-g-PACMO) was fabricated via surface-initiated atom transfer radical polymerisation (ATRP) to separate various surfactant-stabilised emulsions. PVDF-g-PACMO membranes with high hydrophilicity and high permeation were successfully fabricated by controlling the duration of ATRP. Furthermore, fouling models of oil/water emulsions stabilised by anionic, nonionic, and cationic surfactants were examined. Multicycle filtration experiments revealed that the anionic surfactant-stabilised emulsions severely fouled the similarly charged PVDF-g-PACMO membranes owing to electrostatic repulsion, whereas the nonionic and cationic surfactant-stabilised emulsions exhibited reduced irreversible fouling. In particular, an unusual relief in irreversible membrane fouling was observed with respect to the cationic surfactant-stabilised emulsions, presumably because of strong demulsification and steric effects (surfactant barrier), which repelled the penetration of oil droplets into the internal pores and averted pore blockage. These observations suggest that oppositely charged surface potentials of the PVDF-g-PACMO membranes compared to that of the oil/water emulsions assist in mitigating irreversible fouling. The mechanisms examined herein described the relationship between the surface properties of the oil/water emulsions and the tendency for irreversible fouling, thereby providing valuable guidance for sustainable separation of oil/water emulsions.

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