4.8 Article

Biomimetic Silicification on Membrane Surface for Highly Efficient Treatments of Both Oil-in-Water Emulsion and Protein Wastewater

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 10, Issue 35, Pages 29982-29991

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.8b09218

Keywords

membrane separation; biomimetic silicification; oil-in-water emulsion separation; protein interception; antifouling

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21676063]
  2. Open Project of State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment (Harbin Institute Technology) [HC201706]
  3. HIT Environment and Ecology Innovation Special Funds [HSCJ201619]

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The worldwide water crisis and water pollution have put forward great challenges to the current membrane technology. Although poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) porous membranes can find diverse applications for water treatments, the inherent hydrophilicity must be tuned for an energy-/time-saving process. Herein, the surface wettability of PVDF membranes transforming from highly hydrophobicity to highly hydrophilicity was realized via one-step reaction of plant-derived phenol gallic acid and gamma-aminopropyltriethoxysilane in aqueous solutions. The surface hydrophilicization can be achieved on porous PVDF membranes by virtue of integration of a mussel-inspired coating and in situ silicification via a pyrogallol-amino covalent bridge toward excellent antifouling performance and highly efficient infiltration ability for oily emulsion and protein wastewater treatment. The water flux of a surface-manipulated microfiltration membrane can reach ca. 9246 L m(-2) h(-1) (54-fold increment compared to that of pristine membrane), oil rejection >99.5% in a three-cycle emulsion separation; the modified ultrafiltration membrane demonstrated benign performance in bovine serum albumin protein interception (rejection as high as ca. 96.6% with water flux of ca. 278.2 L m(-2) h(-1)) and antifouling potential (increase of ca. 70.8%). Our in situ biomimetic silicification under green conditions exhibits the great potential of the developed strategy in fabrication of similar multifunctional membranes toward environmental remediation.

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