4.8 Article

Cross-linked Graphene Oxide Framework Membranes with Robust Nano-Channels for Enhanced Sieving Ability

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 23, Pages 15442-15453

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c05387

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21876020, 52070033]
  2. Youth Top-Notch Talent Program of Talent Project of Revitalizing Liaoning [XLYC1807250]
  3. National Key Research and Development Project [2019YFA0705803]
  4. 111 Program of Introducing Talents of Discipline to Universities [B13012]
  5. Haitian Scholar Program from Dalian University of Technology
  6. project of Changzhou Science and Technology Bureau [CJ20190013]
  7. Key Laboratory of Industrial Ecology and Environmental Engineering (MOE) at Dalian University of Technology

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It remains challenging for graphene oxide (GO) membranes to achieve highly efficient performance and sufficient stability for aqueous molecule/ion precise separations. Herein, a molecular-level rational structure design protocol was proposed to develop ceramic-based graphene oxide framework (GOF) membranes with significantly enhanced sieving performance and stability for efficient removal of salts and micropollutants. Via a molecular cross-linking strategy, interlayered nanochannels between GO nanosheets can be rationally designed, featuring precisely tailorable channel size, promising surface chemistries and remarkably robust stability suitable for aqueous separation. Due to a significantly decreased nanochannel size, cross-linking of TU (thiourea) molecule significantly improved monovalent salt rejection (95.6% for NaCl), outperforming existing state-of-the-art GO-based, commercial organic nanofiltration and emerging two-dimensional MoS2 membranes, while moderately decreasing water permeability. In comparison, the GOF membranes cross-linked with MPD (m-phenylenediamine) exhibited a simultaneous increase in permeability and rejection for both salts and micropollutants (21.0% and 53.3% enhancement for chloramphenicol (CAP) solution), breaking their conventional trade-off issue. Cross-linking mechanism indicates that more robust nanochannels were formed by stronger covalent bonds via dehydration condensation between amine (TU/MPD) and carboxyl groups (GO), and nucleophilic addition between amine (TU/MPD) and epoxy groups (GO). Molecule/ion separation mechanism involved size sieving (steric hindrance), electrostatic interaction, Donnan effect, and partial dehydration effect. This work provides a novel protocol for rationally designing size and surface chemistry of highly robust GO nanochannels at a subnanometer level to construct water-stable functional GOF membranes with enhanced sieving performance for water treatment applications.

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