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Impact of MWCO and Dopamine/Polyethyleneimine Concentrations on Surface Properties and Filtration Performance of Modified Membranes

Mariane Carolina Proner, Ingrid Ramalho Marques, Alan Ambrosi, Kátia Rezzadori, Cristiane da Costa, Guilherme Zin, Marcus V. Tres, Marco Di Luccio

2020Membranes28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The mussel-inspired method has been investigated to modify commercial ultrafiltration membranes to induce antifouling characteristics. Such features are essential to improve the feasibility of using membrane processes in protein recovery from waste streams, wastewater treatment, and reuse. However, some issues still need to be clarified, such as the influence of membrane pore size and the polymer concentration used in modifying the solution. The aim of the present work is to study a one-step deposition of dopamine (DA) and polyethyleneimine (PEI) on ultrafiltration membrane surfaces. The effects of different membrane molecular weight cut-offs (MWCO, 20, 30, and 50 kDa) and DA/PEI concentrations on membrane performance were assessed by surface characterization (FTIR, AFM, zeta potential, contact angle, protein adsorption) and permeation of protein solution. Results indicate that larger MWCO membranes (50 kDa) are most benefited by modification using DA and PEI. Moreover, PEI is primarily responsible for improving membrane performance in protein solution filtration. The membrane modified with 0.5:4.0 mg mL−1 (DA: PEI) presented a better performance in protein solution filtration, with only 15% of permeate flux drop after 2 h of filtration. The modified membrane can thus be potentially applied to the recovery of proteins from waste streams.

Topics & Concepts

MembraneUltrafiltration (renal)Filtration (mathematics)PermeationChromatographyChemistryZeta potentialAdsorptionChemical engineeringBiofoulingProtein adsorptionContact angleMembrane foulingFoulingNanoparticleOrganic chemistryBiochemistryMathematicsEngineeringStatisticsMembrane Separation TechnologiesPolymer Surface Interaction StudiesAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials