4.6 Article

Improving Membrane Filtration for Copper Speciation: Optimal Salt Pretreatments of Polyethersulfone Membranes to Prevent Analyte Retention

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c07355

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Membrane filtration, using ultrafiltration membranes like PES, is commonly employed to separate dissolved metal ions from dispersed particles. However, the retention of ions due to Coulomb interactions with the membrane's sulfonic acid groups is a disadvantage. This study found that pretreating the PES membrane with certain cations can improve the recovery of copper ions, with Ca2+ being the most effective pretreatment agent at a concentration of 0.1 mol L-1.
Membrane filtration has been increasingly used to separate dissolved metal ions from dispersed particles, commonly using ultrafiltration membranes, for example, polyethersulfone (PES) membranes with a molecular weight cut-off of 3 kDa. The disadvantage of this technique is an undesired retention of ions, resulting from Coulomb interactions with sulfonic acid groups of the membrane. Therefore, such a membrane acts similar to a cation exchanger column. We solved this drawback by a pretreatment of the PES membrane by other cations. Using CuSO4 as a model compound, we compared the effectiveness of five cations using their salt solutions (Ca2+, Mg2+, Fe2+, Ag+, Ba2+) as pretreatment agents and identified the most effective pretreatment component for a high recovery of copper ions. After membrane filtration without pretreatment, only 52 +/- 10%, 64 +/- 5%, 75 +/- 8%, and 89 +/- 7% of nominal Cu concentrations were obtained using initial concentrations of 0.2, 0.5, 1.0, and 4.0 mg L-1, respectively. The efficiency of the investigated cations increased in the order Fe < Ag < Mg < Ca < Ba. Furthermore, we analyzed the most efficient concentration of the pretreatment agent. The best performance was achieved using 0.1 mol L-1 CaCl2 which increased copper recovery to slightly below 100%, even at the lowest tested Cu concentration (recovery 93 +/- 10% at 0.2 mg L-1). In the environmentally relevant Cu concentration range of 0.2 mg L-1, 0.1 mol L-1 BaCl2 was identified as the most efficient pretreatment (103 +/- 11%).

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