More resilient polyester membranes for high-performance reverse osmosis desalination

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Abstract

Thin-film composite reverse osmosis membranes have remained the gold standard technology for desalination and water purification for nearly half a century. Polyamide films offer excellent water permeability and salt rejection but also suffer from poor chlorine resistance, high fouling propensity, and low boron rejection. We addressed these issues by molecularly designing a polyester thin-film composite reverse osmosis membrane using co-solvent–assisted interfacial polymerization to react 3,5-dihydroxy-4-methylbenzoic acid with trimesoyl chloride. This polyester membrane exhibits substantial water permeability, high rejection for sodium chloride and boron, and complete resistance toward chlorine. The ultrasmooth, low-energy surface of the membrane also prevents fouling and mineral scaling compared with polyamide membranes. These membranes could increasingly challenge polyamide membranes by further optimizing water-salt selectivity, offering a path to considerably reducing pretreatment steps in desalination.

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Yao, Y., Zhang, P., Sun, F., Zhang, W., Li, M., Sha, G., … Elimelech, M. (2024). More resilient polyester membranes for high-performance reverse osmosis desalination. Science, 384(6693), 333–338. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adk0632

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