Tunable membranes incorporating artificial water channels for high-performance brackish/low-salinity water reverse osmosis desalination

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Abstract

Membrane-based technologies have a tremendous role in water purification and desalination. Inspired by biological proteins, artificial water channels (AWCs) have been proposed to overcome the permeability/selectivity trade-off of desalination processes. Promising strategies exploiting the AWC with angstrom-scale selectivity have revealed their impressive performances when embedded in bilayer membranes. Herein, we demonstrate that self-assembled imidazole-quartet (I-quartet) AWCs are macroscopically incorporated within industrially relevant reverse osmosis membranes. In particular, we explore the best combination between I-quartet AWC and m-phenylenediamine (MPD) monomer to achieve a seamless incorporation of AWC in a defect-free polyamide membrane. The performance of the membranes is evaluated by crossflow filtration under real reverse osmosis conditions (15 to 20 bar of applied pressure) by filtration of brackish feed streams. The optimized bioinspired membranes achieve an unprecedented improvement, resulting in more than twice (up to 6.9 L·m-2·h-1·bar-1) water permeance of analogous commercialmembranes,whilemaintaining excellent NaCl rejection (>99.5%). They show also excellent performance in the purification of low-salinity water under low-pressure conditions (6 bar of applied pressure) with fluxes up to 35 L·m-2·h-1and 97.5 to 99.3% observed rejection.

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APA

Di Vincenzo, M., Tiraferri, A., Musteata, V. E., Chisca, S., Deleanu, M., Ricceri, F., … Barboiu, M. (2021). Tunable membranes incorporating artificial water channels for high-performance brackish/low-salinity water reverse osmosis desalination. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(37). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2022200118

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