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Ion specific effects on aqueous phase separation of responsive copolymers for sustainable membranes

Wouter M. Nielen, Joshua D. Willott, Zephaniah M. Esguerra, Wiebe M. de Vos

2020Journal of Colloid and Interface Science28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Salt identity and concentration affects the preparation of membranes via the aqueous phase separation approach. The phase inversion process and morphology of the resultant membranes is expected to vary as function of these two parameters. Polymeric membranes based on the responsive copolymer polystyrene-alt-maleic acid (PSaMA) are prepared using the aqueous phase separation approach and the influence of salt identity (Na2SO4, LiCl, NaCl, NaNO3, NH4Cl, MgCl2, CaCl2) and concentration on resultant membrane morphology and separation performance is investigated. Complementary stability experiments of PSaMA solutions are performed to help understand the intricate aqueous phase separation process. Specific ion effects are observed during membrane formation by the aqueous phase separation approach. At equal ionic strengths, Na2SO4 and LiCl lead to the formation of more open membrane structures compared to NaCl, NaNO3, NH4Cl, and MgCl2, while CaCl2 results in membranes with dense top layers. These ion-specific effects are likely caused by a combination of ion mobility and interaction potential between the ion and the polyelectrolyte. Overall, from this work it becomes clear that salt identity and concentration are key parameters in the APS process, and they can be optimised to tune membrane structure from open microfiltration to dense nanofiltration membranes.

Topics & Concepts

MembraneAqueous solutionChemical engineeringNanofiltrationMicrofiltrationPolyelectrolyteChemistryPhase (matter)Separation processPhase inversionSalt (chemistry)ChromatographyCopolymerMaterials scienceOrganic chemistryPolymerBiochemistryEngineeringMembrane Separation TechnologiesMembrane Separation and Gas TransportMembrane-based Ion Separation Techniques
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