AI Article Synopsis

  • Polyamide reverse osmosis and nanofiltration membranes are important for desalination and water reuse, but their performance is limited by the balance between permeability (how much water passes through) and selectivity (how well they filter out contaminants).
  • Traditional thin-film nanocomposite (TFN) membranes use nanomaterials to improve water flow but often face issues like clumping, which can reduce their effectiveness in filtering.
  • A new type of TFN membrane with an interlayer of nanomaterials (TFNi) shows significant improvements in both water flow and selectivity, potentially overcoming previous limitations and enhancing the removal of heavy metals and micropollutants for better environmental applications.

Article Abstract

The separation properties of polyamide reverse osmosis and nanofiltration membranes, widely applied for desalination and water reuse, are constrained by the permeability-selectivity upper bound. Although thin-film nanocomposite (TFN) membranes incorporating nanomaterials exhibit enhanced water permeance, their rejection is only moderately improved or even impaired due to agglomeration of nanomaterials and formation of defects. A novel type of TFN membranes featuring an interlayer of nanomaterials (TFNi) has emerged in recent years. These novel TFNi membranes show extraordinary improvement in water flux (e.g., up to an order of magnitude enhancement) along with better selectivity. Such enhancements can be achieved by a wide selection of nanomaterials, ranging from nanoparticles, one-/two-dimensional materials, to interfacial coatings. The use of nanostructured interlayers not only improves the formation of polyamide rejection layers but also provides an optimized water transport path, which enables TFNi membranes to potentially overcome the longstanding trade-off between membrane permeability and selectivity. Furthermore, TFNi membranes can potentially enhance the removal of heavy metals and micropollutants, which is critical for many environmental applications. This review critically examines the recent developments of TFNi membranes and discusses the underlying mechanisms and design criteria. Their potential environmental applications are also highlighted.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.0c05377DOI Listing

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