Bio-inspired design of next-generation ultrapermeable membrane systems

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Abstract

Ultrapermeable membranes (UPMs) have the potential of improving water production efficiency. However, operating at high water fluxes will intensify concentration polarization and membrane fouling. Inspired by the V-formation of birds in nature we propose a transformative membrane module that enables a doubled mass transfer coefficient with a moderately increased friction loss coefficient. Moreover, we present a practical technological pathway for the UPM systems to achieve 338% improvement of average water flux and 18% energy savings relative to state-of-the-art seawater desalination plants. The work makes it practical to operate at a high average water flux of 84 L m−2 h−1 with a controlled concentration polarization for the UPM systems. It breaks through the module development bottlenecks for the next-generation UPM systems and has enormous potential application for alleviating water scarcity crisis in the coming decades.

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Luo, J., Li, M., & Heng, Y. (2024). Bio-inspired design of next-generation ultrapermeable membrane systems. Npj Clean Water, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-024-00297-7

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