Subscriber access provided by Kaohsiung Medical University
Remediation and Control Technologies
A Path to Ultra-Selectivity: Support Layer Properties to Maximize Performance of Biomimetic Desalination Membranes Jay Ryan Werber, Cassandra J Porter, and Menachem Elimelech Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b03426 • Publication Date (Web): 14 Aug 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 17, 2018
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
A Path to Ultra-Selectivity: Support Layer Properties to Maximize Performance of Biomimetic Desalination Membranes
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Environmental Science & Technology Revised: August 9, 2018
Jay R. Werber, Cassandra J. Porter, and Menachem Elimelech*
Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8286
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
* Corresponding author: Menachem Elimelech, Email:
[email protected], Phone: (203) 432-2789
1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
30
ABSTRACT
31
Reverse osmosis (RO) has become a premier technology for desalination and water purification.
32
The need for increased selectivity has incentivized research into novel membranes, such as
33
biomimetic membranes that incorporate the perfectly-selective biological water channel
34
aquaporin or synthetic water channels like carbon nanotubes. In this study, we consider the
35
performance of composite biomimetic membranes by projecting water permeability, salt
36
rejection, and neutral-solute retention based on the permeabilities of the individual components,
37
particularly the water channel, the amphiphilic bilayer matrix, and potential support layers that
38
include polymeric RO, nanofiltration (NF), and porous ultrafiltration membranes. We find that
39
the support layer will be crucial in the overall performance. Selective, relatively low-
40
permeability supports minimize the negative impact of defects in the biomimetic layer, which are
41
currently the main performance-limiting factor for biomimetic membranes. In particular, RO
42
membranes as support layers would enable >99.85% salt rejection at ~10,000-fold greater
43
biomimetic-layer defect area than for porous supports. By fundamentally characterizing neutral-
44
solute permeation through RO and NF membranes, we show that RO membranes as support
45
layers would enable high rejection of organic pollutants based on molecular size, overcoming the
46
rapid permeation of hydrophobic solutes through the biomimetic layer. A biomimetic membrane
47
could also achieve exceptionally high boron rejections of ~99.7%, even with 1% defect area in
48
the biomimetic layer. We conclude by discussing the implications of our findings for biomimetic
49
membrane design.
50 51
INTRODUCTION
52
Water scarcity is one of the foremost challenges of the 21st century, with severe water scarcity
53
affecting 4 billion people for at least one month a year.1 While responsible water management is
54
essential, water-treatment technologies that increase potable water supplies are similarly crucial.
55
In particular, membrane-based processes such as reverse osmosis (RO) are finding extensive
56
application.2 RO has emerged as a premier technology for not just the desalination of seawater
57
and brackish water, but also the treatment and reuse of municipal and industrial wastewaters due
58
to the ability of RO to remove a wide variety of inorganic and organic contaminants.3, 4 The
59
central component in RO is the membrane itself. Because of the importance of RO in addressing
2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 31
Page 3 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
60
global water challenges, extensive research efforts are on-going to develop novel membrane
61
materials for RO.2
62
The current state of the art is the fully aromatic polyamide thin-film composite (TFC)
63
membrane. Current membranes can achieve up to 99.85% salt (NaCl) rejection5, 6 in standard
64
seawater RO (SWRO) test conditions (55.1 bar, 32000 ppm NaCl) with water permeabilities of
65
1−3 L m-2 h-1 bar-1.2,
66
performance from an energy- and cost-efficiency standpoint, with increased water permeability
67
projected to yield minimal practical impact.7,
68
attainable by TFC membranes would be highly beneficial in desalination and water treatment.7
69
For example, increased rejection of boron and chloride would eliminate the need for additional
70
RO passes during SWRO when the product water is eventually used for irrigation.7 Similarly,
71
increased rejection of organic micropollutants in advanced wastewater treatment would allow for
72
effective potable reuse without the advanced oxidation step, which is currently used to degrade
73
recalcitrant species in the RO permeate but has the potential to itself produce toxic by-products.9
7
These water permeabilities are sufficient for near-optimal SWRO 8
In contrast, increased selectivity above levels
74
A promising class of “next-generation” membrane materials that have the potential to
75
achieve dramatically improved selectivity are so-called biomimetic desalination membranes.2, 10
76
Design of these membranes seeks to mimic the structure and separation performance of
77
biological cell membranes by incorporating biological water channels (i.e., the membrane protein
78
aquaporin11) or chemically-designed synthetic water channels2, 10 within a bilayer of lipids or
79
amphiphilic block copolymers. Amphiphilic block copolymers (macromolecules with discrete
80
hydrophilic and hydrophobic polymer segments) are strongly preferred due to their chemical and
81
mechanical stability.12,
82
commercial interest due to its relative stability14 and, more importantly, its high water
83
permeability and essentially perfect selectivity. AqpZ and certain other aquaporin types are near-
84
perfect barriers to all solutes, even small neutral solutes like ammonia and urea.15, 16
85 86
13
Bacterial aquaporin-Z (AqpZ) has received the most research and
Synthetic water channels would ideally yield similar transport performance as aquaporin, but with improved stability and processability.17, 19, 20
18
The most prominent example is the carbon
87
nanotube porin (CNTP),
88
selectivity for water over salt if the CNTP diameter is well-controlled.20, 21 Research on synthetic
89
water channels is still mostly in the early stage, with channel permeabilities and/or selectivities
which is extremely permeable to water and could yield very high
3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
90
still substantially inferior to that of aquaporin.2 For synthetically-designed channels, current
91
research largely focuses on the rational design of improved channel structures.22
92
In terms of membrane fabrication, there have been two approaches used thus far, mostly with
93
AqpZ as the water channel. The first method incorporates AqpZ-containing vesicles within the
94
polyamide layer of TFC membranes, with the vesicles theoretically improving the water
95
permeability.23 While this method has recently been commercialized,24 performance is still
96
largely dependent on the polyamide film, and for this reason, only minor performance gains may
97
be possible. The second, more radical method is to form a solid-supported planar bilayer to serve
98
as an integral selective layer. Following the example of TFC membranes, for which the
99
polyamide selective layer is formed on ultrafiltration-type porous supports, most efforts to form
100
planar biomimetic membranes have used porous support layers.10 In contrast to the vesicle
101
approach, the planar-bilayer approach would fully utilize the transport properties of AqpZ (or
102
other selective water channels).
103
We recently reported that a defect-free biomimetic selective layer with ~3% AqpZ (by area)
104
would have revolutionary performance, with similar water permeability as TFC membranes,
105
near-perfect salt rejection (salt passage of 1 since ABM is dependent on ASL from eq 6. The normalized
268
pure water flux through defects is the ratio of the water flux through defects, Jw,def, and the total
269
water flux, Jw,total, and is given by
270
J w,def
J w,total
=
A 'θ 1− θ + A 'θ
[8]
271
As shown in Figure 2B, the normalized pure water flux through defects is much greater for
272
support layers with higher permeability. Decreasing A’—by maximizing the permeability of the
273
biomimetic layer or by using a relatively low-permeability support layer—is clearly important
274
for minimizing the deleterious impact of defects. If flow through defects is magnified by a high
275
value of A’, then even small defect areas will be catastrophic for performance.
276
Potential for Unprecedented Salt Rejection. Biomimetic membranes arguably have
277
the greatest potential among next-generation RO membrane materials for dramatic improvements
278
in salt rejection.25 If a channel is used that perfectly rejects ions (such as aquaporin), then ion
279
flux through a defect-free active layer can only occur through the amphiphilic matrix. We
280
recently measured NaCl permeability through PB-PEO and MDM bilayers to be ~4 × 10-9 L m-2
281
h-1, as compared with 0.03–0.06 L m-2 h-1 for the most-selective TFC RO membranes.7
282
Correspondingly, NaCl passage of 99.9999999%) is expected for
283
a defect-free biomimetic membrane. The discrepancy between this ultra-low value and the
284
relatively poor rejections observed experimentally10 must be due to the presence of defects.
10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 11 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
285
In order to quantitatively estimate the impact of defects, we consider the local water and salt
286
fluxes that would occur in defect-free regions and through defects. We use the water and salt
287
performance equations from the solution-diffusion model, which models molecular transport
288
through the membrane as a combination of partitioning from the feed into the membrane,
289
diffusion down its chemical potential gradient across the membrane thickness, and departitioning
290
into the permeate.39 The performance equations incorporate boundary-layer effects using film
291
theory, which can then be used to solve for the local water flux and the local salt flux, Js:
292
J J w,x = Ax ∆p − ∆π exp w,x kNaCl
[9]
293
J J s,x = Bx ∆C exp w,x k NaCl
[10]
294
The subscript x refers to the local membrane condition: a defect-free region of the biomimetic
295
membrane (subscript “BM”) or a defect (subscript “def”). The osmotic pressure difference, ∆π,
296
and the salt concentration difference, ∆C, refer to the bulk feed and permeate solutions (e.g., ∆C
297
= Cb − Cp). The total flux, J, for water or salt is then calculated as the area-weighted average of
298
the local fluxes:
299
J = (1 − θ ) J BM + θ J def
[11]
300
The observed rejection, Ro, can then be calculated from these total water and salt fluxes, as the
301
permeate concentration, Cp, is the ratio of the fluxes (i.e., Cp = J s J w ), and Ro = 1 − Cp Cb .
302
Figure 3 shows the projected NaCl rejections during SWRO for defect-containing
303
biomimetic membranes (with 3% AqpZ) formed on various support layers. The dashed line
304
shows the highest NaCl rejection attainable using current TFC membranes (99.85%).5, 6 Because
305
the biomimetic active layer can theoretically attain near-perfect rejection, biomimetic
306
membranes formed on each of the considered supports can theoretically outperform this rejection
307
level. The key difference is the acceptable defect area. For example, according to our model, a
308
biomimetic membrane formed on the most selective, lowest permeability support—RO-HR,
309
which itself is already a SWRO membrane—could reach 99.85% rejection with a defect density
310
of 16%, whereas a biomimetic membrane formed on the porous UF-3 support would need a 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
311
~10,000-fold lower defect density (0.002%). The intermediate permeability support layers, RO-
312
HP and NF, would require defect densities to be less than 4% and 0.06%, respectively. Similarly,
313
for a given defect density, the corresponding projected rejections vary dramatically. For example,
314
if a defect density of 0.06% can be achieved to enable 99.85% rejection using NF as a support,
315
the corresponding salt rejection when using RO-HR as a support would be 99.9994%, a more
316
than 200-fold increase in separation efficiency. While increasing defect area increases water
317
permeability (Figure 2B), in the performance range of interest (Ro ≥ 99.85%) the effect on
318
selectivity is much greater (Figure S1).
319
The difference in projected performance stems from two factors: the salt-rejecting
320
performance of the support layer and the ratio of water permeabilities, A’, that was discussed in
321
the previous section. For example, if we arbitrarily increase the salt permeability of RO-HR to
322
1000 L m-2 h-1 but keep the water permeability at 2.20 L m-2 h-1 bar-1, then the defect density
323
would need to be ~0.05% to achieve 99.85% salt rejection, roughly the same density as projected
324
when using the partially salt-rejecting NF and 25-fold greater than the density projected for UF-3
325
(0.002%). Conclusions are very similar for a biomimetic active layer containing 10% AqpZ
326
(Figure S2).
327
The dramatic defect-mitigating effect of moderately-permeable, salt-selective support layers
328
in biomimetic membranes is strikingly similar to the effect of “caulking” that first enabled the
329
commercial application of membranes for gas separations.34, 35 In gas separation membranes, the
330
inevitable presence of defects drastically reduced achievable separation factors due to the sharp
331
permeability difference between flow in the pores (defects) and solution–diffusion-driven flow
332
through the polymeric selective layer. The caulking approach solved this problem by casting a
333
relatively thick (>1 µm) silicone rubber layer on top of the defect-containing membrane to block
334
the defects. This silicone layer, which was slightly more permeable than the base membrane and
335
not selective between the relevant gases, sharply decreased the permeability of the defected area.
336
The reduced defect permeability from this composite membrane structure allowed for ~105-fold
337
higher defect tolerance (by area), with only minor reductions in overall permeability and
338
selectivity compared to a defect-free base membrane.34
339
FIGURE 3
12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 31
Page 13 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
340
Neutral Solute Retention. While salt removal is typically the most prominent task in RO,
341
especially in seawater desalination, neutral solute removal is often important. For example, in
342
SWRO, removal of the neutral boric acid (boron) to very low levels (less than ~0.5 ppm) is often
343
necessary when the product water is used downstream for irrigation purposes.7 In the large-
344
volume production of ultrapure water for the semiconductor and power industries, RO is used as
345
the central step to remove the bulk of the dissolved ion content.7 Extremely high salt rejections
346
like those projected in Figure 3 would be very useful in this application, but the need for low
347
organic content also necessitates neutral solute removal. Undoubtedly though, neutral solute
348
removal is most important in the potable reuse of municipal wastewater, which will play a major
349
role in the coming years in addressing water scarcity issues.3 The most critical requirement of
350
RO in wastewater reuse is the removal of small micropollutants that are difficult to remove using
351
other technologies. Micropollutants are species that are harmful to human or ecological health at
352
very low concentrations, and typically are relatively hydrophobic.40
353
In our recent study, we found that the permeability of neutral solutes through lipid and block
354
copolymer bilayers was solubility-dependent over 10 orders of magnitude.25 In other words, the
355
more soluble a species is in the nonpolar core of the bilayer, the more permeable that species is.
356
Solute size played a relatively minor role. Permeability of solutes through the membrane matrix,
357
PM, was related to the octanol-water partition coefficient, Kow, a commonly used metric of solute
358
hydrophobicity:25
359
PBL ≈ PM = a ( K ow )
b
[12]
360
PBL ≈ PM for all solutes because of the low areal density of water channels25 and the perfect
361
selectivity of aquaporin (i.e., Pc = 0 for all species except for water). For P in units of m/s, the
362
coefficients a and b in eq 12 were 1.78 × 10-6 and 2.05 for PB-PEO and 1.33 × 10-4 and 2.19 for
363
MDM. While this relation does not give quantitative predictions, it allows for the permeability of
364
a given solute to be estimated. In particular, a hydrophobicity cut-off of log Kow ~ −0.2 was
365
determined for biomimetic active layers using PB-PEO, the less permeable (and therefore more
366
selective) amphiphilic matrix.25
367
All of the support layers considered (RO, NF, and UF) predominantly retain neutral solutes
368
based on size. Therefore, the permeation behavior of neutral solutes through a composite 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 14 of 31
369
biomimetic membrane will involve both the hydrophobicity-based selectivity of the biomimetic
370
layer and the size-based selectivity of the support layer. To obtain size-based relationships for
371
solute retention, the permeation of small neutral molecules was assessed for RO-HR, RO-HP,
372
and NF.
373
For RO, transport was assumed to follow the solution-diffusion model.39,
41
Using real
374
rejections measured for model neutral solutes (Figure 4A, Table S1), solute permeabilities were
375
determined for RO-HR and RO-HP (Figure 4B, Table S1). Model solutes were chosen to give a
376
range of size as well as hydrophobicity, including hydrophilic sugars and hydrophobic solutes
377
such as the aromatic thymol (log Kow of 3.3). Rejection behavior was relatively similar for RO-
378
HR and RO-HP, both of which had molecular-weight cut-offs of ~80 g/mol. By free-volume
379
theory, diffusive permeability, Pi, for species i through a polymer film is given by30
380
−b Pi = Ki ai exp i 〈vf 〉
[13]
381
where Ki is the partition coefficient of species i into the membrane, 〈vf〉 is the average free
382
volume in the polymer, and ai and bi are adjustable parameters. The parameter bi is proportional
383
to the solute size. In the original formulation by Cohen and Turnbull,42 bi = γ v * , where γ is a
384
fitting parameter and v* is the minimum void volume that allows entrance or exit of the penetrant.
385
Based on this volume-based condition, a comparison of log P with the van der Waals volume of
386
the species of interest is perhaps most appropriate. The van der Waals volume is the minimum
387
volume that a species occupies,43, 44 which is relevant considering that the solution-diffusion
388
model often assumes diffusion of individual molecules through the film.39 While the measured
389
permeabilities for RO-HR and RO-HP fit fairly well with the van der Waals volume (Figure S3),
390
the correlation is stronger with the van der Waals radius, rvdw (Figure 4B), which is the radius of
391
a sphere with the equivalent van der Waals volume. Because of the relatively strong correlations
392
(r2 of 0.88 for RO-HR and 0.76 for RO-HP) and the more intuitive nature of the solute radius, we
393
relate the permeability of species i to its van der Waals radius, rvdw,i, using the following
394
adaptation of eq 13:
395
Pi = a exp ( −brvdw,i )
[14]
14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 15 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
396
Here, a and b are constants that are characteristic of a given membrane. For permeability in m/s
397
and rvdw in nm, a and b were 0.319 m/s and 49.8 nm-1 for RO-HR, and 0.0558 m/s and 40.0 nm-1
398
for RO-HP.
399
FIGURE 4
400
Loose NF membranes like NF-270 are generally considered to have discrete pores.29 For this
401
reason, instead of calculating permeabilities using the solution-diffusion model, the NF
402
membrane was assessed using a pore flow model (hindered transport theory), which is fully
403
described elsewhere.29, 45 The key outcome of this model is an equation for real rejection, Rr, that
404
largely relies on λ, which is the ratio between the solute radius, rvdw, and the pore radius, rp (i.e.,
405
λ = rvdw rp ):
(1 − λ ) K c Rr = 1 − 2 1 − exp ( − Pe ) 1 − (1 − λ ) K c 2
406
[15]
407
Here, Kc is a hydrodynamic coefficient and the membrane Peclet number for species i, Pei, is
408
defined as
409
Pei =
K c J wδ m K dε Di
[16]
410
where Kd is also a hydrodynamic coefficient. Kc and Kd are functions of λ and can be determined
411
analytically as described elsewhere.29, 46 The membrane thickness, δm, of NF was taken to be 30
412
nm based on published thickness measurements of the isolated active layer.47 The porosity, ε,
413
was taken to be 8% to yield reasonable water permeability values by eq 4.
414
Using eqs 15 and 16, rejection data for select neutral solutes was fitted to determine the
415
membrane pore size (Figure S4, Table S2). The hydrophilic, non-aromatic solutes glucose,
416
erythritol, and dioxane yielded a consistent pore radius of 0.40−0.41 nm, matching published
417
results for this membrane determined using similar solutes.29, 47 However, when a hydrophobic
418
aromatic solute (thymol) was used as the organic tracer, rejection was anomalously low,
419
resulting in a substantially larger fitted pore radius of 0.51 nm. For aromatic acids assessed at pH
420
3 (Figure S5), fitted pore sizes were similarly greater than the 0.40-nm pore radius obtained
421
using the hydrophilic solutes. Anomalously low rejection of hydrophobic contaminants by NF
15 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 16 of 31
422
membranes (NF-270) has similarly been observed for hydrophobic endocrine disrupting
423
compounds, with the increased permeation attributed to enhanced solute partitioning within the
424
semi-aromatic active layer.29, 48
425
From the relationships above, the permeation of neutral solutes through composite
426
biomimetic membranes can be estimated based on the solute size (rvdw) and hydrophobicity (Kow).
427
For RO membranes as support layers, the composite permeability can be determined with eq 6
428
and used to calculate rejection using the solution-diffusion model (analogs to eqs 1, 9, and 10).
429
For NF and UF membranes as support layers, the real rejection by the support layer, Rr,SL, can
430
first be determined based on Jw and λ with eqs 15 and 16. For NF, the larger fitted pore size of
431
0.51 nm based on thymol was used, as the majority of the solutes of interest are aromatic and/or
432
hydrophobic. The calculated real rejection by the support layer can then be combined with the
433
biomimetic layer permeability, PBL, to calculate the overall observed rejection, Ro:
434
435
J R −J Ro = w + r,SL exp w 1 − Ro PBL 1 − Rr,SL ki
[17]
A derivation of eq 17 is provided in the Supporting Information.
436
Projected rejections of neutral solutes, based on rvdw and Kow, are shown in Figures 5 and S6
437
for biomimetic membranes using PB-PEO and MDM, respectively. Fluxes were calculated for
438
applied pressures of 15.5 bar and 1000 ppm NaCl. Overlaid on the rejection contours are the size
439
and hydrophobicity of neutrally-charged micropollutants that are relevant for wastewater reuse.25
440
Almost all of the micropollutants would be poorly rejected when UF-3 is used as a support, since
441
hydrophobic species will rapidly permeate the biomimetic active layer and 3-nm pores are too
442
large to meaningfully retain solutes of interest. The main exception is the hydrophilic
443
pharmaceutical iopromide (log Kow of −2.05), which should be highly rejected by the biomimetic
444
active layer. Two important partial exceptions are N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA; log Kow of
445
−0.57) and 1,4-dioxane (log Kow of −0.27), both of which have caused shutdowns of advanced
446
wastewater treatment plants due to detection in the product water.7,
447
octanol/water partition coefficients, NDMA and 1,4-dioxane would be rejected at ~98% and
448
~94%, respectively, by a defect-free PB-PEO-based biomimetic active layer. Clearly, however,
449
the largest gains can be made by using a highly selective support layer. If RO-HR is used as a
16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
49
Based on their
Page 17 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
450
support, all of the micropollutants considered are projected to be at least 90% retained, with
451
many retained at >99.9%.
452
FIGURE 5
453
The above discussion was for a defect-free biomimetic layer. Using the same methodology as
454
for salt, we now consider rejection with biomimetic layers with 1% defect area for the important
455
neutral solutes boron and 1,4-dioxane. Explicitly-measured boron permeabilities from our
456
previous study25 were used for PB-PEO (0.018 ± 0.004 L m-2 h-1) and MDM (0.86 ± 0.07 L m-2 h-
457
1
458
m-2 h-1 for MDM, as permeation was too rapid for measurement (Figure S7). Boron and dioxane
459
permeabilities were also explicitly measured for the model support layers (Figure 6A). Figure 6B
460
shows the projected rejections using biomimetic membranes in SWRO for boron and in
461
wastewater RO for 1,4-dioxane. For boron, the biomimetic membrane offers tremendous
462
advantage, even with 1% defect area. With RO-HR as a support, projected boron rejections are
463
99.7% (PB-PEO) and 97.5% (MDM), compared with 87.1% for the support alone. Even with NF
464
as a support, which only has 5.4% boron rejection by itself, rejections of 94.6−96.5% are
465
projected, which exceed rejections (93% at pH 8) of the most-selective SWRO membranes
466
For dioxane, the biomimetic layer only plays a significant role when the support is NF and the
467
selective layer uses PB-PEO, with a projected rejection of 89% compared to 37% for the support
468
alone. For RO-HR and RO-HP, the support plays the dominant role in dioxane retention.
469
). 1,4-dioxane permeability was estimated using eq 12 to be 1.8 L m-2 h-1 for PB-PEO and 123 L
5, 6
.
FIGURE 6
470
Implications for Membrane Design. Our analysis projects that composite biomimetic
471
desalination membranes could achieve ultra-selectivity for desalination (removal of salt), even
472
with meaningful amounts of defects in the biomimetic layer. Similar, if not better, performance
473
would be expected for inorganic contaminants such as heavy metals or arsenic. Our models also
474
predict dramatic differences in performance based on the support layer. In particular, design
475
strategies using RO or NF membranes as support layers are highly advantageous. Higher
476
permeability UF membranes offer marginal benefits for water permeability, sharply increase the
477
penalty of defects on salt rejection, and do not aid with neutral solute retention. For increased
478
removal of salt and contaminants, using the most selective support layer (i.e., RO-HR) is always
479
preferred. The main drawback is the moderate decrease in water permeability, although the 1.18 17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 18 of 31
480
L m-2 h-1 bar-1 permeability projected for RO-HR with 3% AqpZ would be adequate for SWRO.
481
Increased water permeability may incentivize usage of RO-HP (or even NF), depending on the
482
application and the achievable channel density in the biomimetic layer.
483
Size-selective TFC membranes may also be advantageous for fabricating biomimetic layers.
484
The chemistry can be tailored to provide desired functional groups for anchoring or attaching of
485
the biomimetic layer. Additionally, the dense surface should provide enhanced mechanical
486
integrity, compared to porous surfaces, for the soft materials (proteins and block copolymers)
487
that comprise the biomimetic layer. Another interesting consideration from our results deals with
488
the channel itself. Since the support layer will be essential for neutral solute removal, channels
489
that perfectly reject salt but allow passage of small neutral solutes, such as potentially carbon
490
nanotubes20, would be nearly as effective in biomimetic membranes as the perfectly-selective
491
aquaporin. One important exception would be the increased boron rejection projected when
492
using aquaporin.
493
It is also important to consider the assumptions inherent in our modeling, which not only
494
affect interpretation of our results but also how these membranes should be designed. First, we
495
assumed that there is minimal lateral transport between the biomimetic layer and the underlying
496
layer. As a result, any defects that are present only affect the relevant defect area. If a liquid-
497
filled gap or a gutter layer with extremely high permeability is used between a low-permeability
498
support (e.g., RO-HR) and a biomimetic layer, this assumption would not apply. Second, we
499
assumed that defect edges have negligible influence on transport, which is likely an accurate
500
assumption considering that the vesicle-rupture technique that has been most commonly used can
501
often produce defects >10 nm in diameter.10, 50 Lastly, we neglected roughness in the support
502
layer, which is most relevant for fully-aromatic polyamide RO membranes that typically have a
503
rough, crumpled-nanofilm morphology.51, 52 Our models considered the projected area, thus not
504
taking into account roughness and the correspondingly increased actual surface area.
505
Additionally, the crumpled-nanofilm morphology would likely complicate the fabrication of a
506
biomimetic membrane. Recently developed techniques to make smooth polyamide films53,
507
would likely be essential.
508
18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
54
Page 19 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
509
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
510
Supporting Information
511
Derivation of eq 17; trade-off between water permeability and salt rejection (Figure S1);
512
projected salt passage for membranes with 10% AqpZ (Figure S2); solute permeability
513
relationships with van der Waals molar volume for TFC RO membranes (Figure S3); pore size
514
estimation for NF-270 at pH 7 (Figure S4); pore size estimation for NF-270 at pH 3 (Figure S5);
515
projected solute retention for MDM-based biomimetic membrane (Figure S6); dioxane
516
permeability measurements for PB-PEO bilayers (Figure S7); solutes assessed and measured real
517
rejections and permeabilities for RO membranes (Table S1); estimated pore sizes for different
518
solutes for NF-270 (Table S2); physicochemical characteristics of neutrally-charged
519
micropollutants (Table S3). This information is available free of charge via the Internet at
520
http://pubs.acs.org/.
521 522
AUTHOR INFORMATION
523
Corresponding Author
524
*Phone: (203) 432-2789; e-mail:
[email protected].
525
Notes
526
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
527 528
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
529
We acknowledge financial support received from the National Science Foundation (NSF)
530
through the Engineering Research Center for Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment (EEC-
531
1449500) and via Grant CBET 1437630. We also acknowledge the NSF Graduate Research
532
Fellowships awarded to J.R.W. (DGE-1122492) and C.J.P. (DGE-1752134), and the Abel
533
Wolman Fellowship from the American Water Works Association awarded to J.R.W.
19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
534
REFERENCES
535 536
(1)
Mekonnen, M. M.; Hoekstra, A. Y., Four billion people facing severe water scarcity. Sci. Adv. 2016, 2, (2), e1500323.
537 538
(2)
Werber, J. R.; Osuji, C. O.; Elimelech, M., Materials for next-generation desalination and water purification membranes. Nat. Rev. Mater. 2016, 1, (5), 16018.
539 540 541
(3)
National Research Council. Water Reuse: Potential for Expanding the Nation's Water Supply Through Reuse of Municipal Wastewater. National Academies Press: Washington, DC, 2012.
542 543
(4)
Elimelech, M.; Phillip, W. A., The future of seawater desalination: energy, technology, and the environment. Science 2011, 333, (6043), 712-7.
544
(5)
Technical Data Sheet for DOW FILMTEC™ SW30XHR. www.dow.com
545
(6)
Technical Data Sheet for LG SW SR. www.lgwatersolutions.com
546 547 548
(7)
Werber, J. R.; Deshmukh, A.; Elimelech, M., The critical need for increased selectivity, not increased water permeability, for desalination membranes. Environ. Sci. Technol. Lett. 2016, 3, (4), 112-120.
549 550 551
(8)
Cohen-Tanugi, D.; McGovern, R. K.; Dave, S. H.; Lienhard, J. H.; Grossman, J. C., Quantifying the potential of ultra-permeable membranes for water desalination. Energy Environ. Sci. 2014, 7, (3), 1134-1141.
552 553 554
(9)
Karci, A., Degradation of chlorophenols and alkylphenol ethoxylates, two representative textile chemicals, in water by advanced oxidation processes: the state of the art on transformation products and toxicity. Chemosphere 2014, 99, 1-18.
555 556
(10) Shen, Y. X.; Saboe, P. O.; Sines, I. T.; Erbakan, M.; Kumar, M., Biomimetic membranes: A review. J. Membr. Sci. 2014, 454, 359-381.
557 558 559
(11) Kumar, M.; Grzelakowski, M.; Zilles, J.; Clark, M.; Meier, W., Highly permeable polymeric membranes based on the incorporation of the functional water channel protein Aquaporin Z. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2007, 104, (52), 20719-24.
560 561
(12) Mecke, A.; Dittrich, C.; Meier, W., Biomimetic membranes designed from amphiphilic block copolymers. Soft Matter 2006, 2, (9), 751.
562 563 564 565
(13) Ren, T.; Erbakan, M.; Shen, Y.; Barbieri, E.; Saboe, P.; Feroz, H.; Yan, H.; McCuskey, S.; Hall, J. F.; Schantz, A. B.; Bazan, G. C.; Butler, P. J.; Grzelakowski, M.; Kumar, M., Membrane protein insertion into and compatibility with biomimetic membranes. Adv. Biosyst. 2017, 1, (7), 1700053.
566 567 568
(14) Borgnia, M. J.; Kozono, D.; Calamita, G.; Maloney, P. C.; Agre, P., Functional reconstitution and characterization of AqpZ, the E. coli water channel protein. J. Mol. Biol. 1999, 291, (5), 1169-79.
569 570 571
(15) Borgnia, M. J.; Agre, P., Reconstitution and functional comparison of purified GlpF and AqpZ, the glycerol and water channels from Escherichia coli. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2001, 98, (5), 2888-93. 20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 20 of 31
Page 21 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
572 573
(16) Hub, J. S.; de Groot, B. L., Mechanism of selectivity in aquaporins and aquaglyceroporins. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2008, 105, 1198-1203.
574 575 576 577
(17) Licsandru, E.; Kocsis, I.; Shen, Y. X.; Murail, S.; Legrand, Y. M.; van der Lee, A.; Tsai, D.; Baaden, M.; Kumar, M.; Barboiu, M., Salt-excluding artificial water channels exhibiting enhanced dipolar water and proton translocation. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2016, 138, (16), 54039.
578 579 580 581
(18) Shen, Y. X.; Si, W.; Erbakan, M.; Decker, K.; De Zorzi, R.; Saboe, P. O.; Kang, Y. J.; Majd, S.; Butler, P. J.; Walz, T.; Aksimentiev, A.; Hou, J. L.; Kumar, M., Highly permeable artificial water channels that can self-assemble into two-dimensional arrays. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2015, 112, (32), 9810-5.
582 583 584 585
(19) Geng, J.; Kim, K.; Zhang, J.; Escalada, A.; Tunuguntla, R.; Comolli, L. R.; Allen, F. I.; Shnyrova, A. V.; Cho, K. R.; Munoz, D.; Wang, Y. M.; Grigoropoulos, C. P.; Ajo-Franklin, C. M.; Frolov, V. A.; Noy, A., Stochastic transport through carbon nanotubes in lipid bilayers and live cell membranes. Nature 2014, 514, (7524), 612-5.
586 587 588
(20) Tunuguntla, R. H.; Henley, R. Y.; Yao, Y. C.; Pham, T. A.; Wanunu, M.; Noy, A., Enhanced water permeability and tunable ion selectivity in subnanometer carbon nanotube porins. Science 2017, 357, (6353), 792-796.
589 590
(21) Corry, B., Designing carbon nanotube membranes for efficient water desalination. J. Phys. Chem. B 2008, 112, 1427-34.
591 592 593
(22) Song, W.; Lang, C.; Shen, Y.-x.; Kumar, M., Design Considerations for Artificial Water Channel–Based Membranes. Annu. Rev. Mater. Sci. 2018, 48, (1), annurev-matsci-070317124544.
594 595 596 597
(23) Zhao, Y.; Qiu, C. Q.; Li, X. S.; Vararattanavech, A.; Shen, W. M.; Torres, J.; Helix-Nielsen, C.; Wang, R.; Hu, X.; Fane, A. G.; Tang, C. Y., Synthesis of robust and high-performance aquaporin-based biomimetic membranes by interfacial polymerization-membrane preparation and RO performance characterization. J. Membr. Sci. 2012, 423, 422-428.
598 599
(24) Perry, M.; Madsen, S.; Jørgensen, T.; Braekevelt, S.; Lauritzen, K.; Hélix-Nielsen, C., Challenges in Commercializing Biomimetic Membranes. Membranes 2015, 5, 685-701.
600 601
(25) Werber, J. R.; Elimelech, M., Permselectivity limits of biomimetic desalination membranes. Sci. Adv. 2018, 4, (6), eaar8266.
602 603
(26) Saeki, D.; Yamashita, T.; Fujii, A.; Matsuyama, H., Reverse osmosis membranes based on a supported lipid bilayer with gramicidin A water channels. Desalination 2015, 375, 48-53.
604 605 606
(27) Wang, M.; Wang, Z.; Wang, X.; Wang, S.; Ding, W.; Gao, C., Layer-by-layer assembly of aquaporin Z-incorporated biomimetic membranes for water purification. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2015, 49, (6), 3761-8.
607 608 609
(28) Werber, J. R.; Bull, S. K.; Elimelech, M., Acyl-chloride quenching following interfacial polymerization to modulate the water permeability, selectivity, and surface charge of desalination membranes. J. Membr. Sci. 2017, 535, 357-364.
21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
610 611 612
(29) Nghiem, L. D.; Schafer, A. I.; Elimelech, M., Removal of natural hormones by nanofiltration membranes: measurement, modeling, and mechanisms. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2004, 38, (6), 1888-96.
613 614
(30) Geise, G. M.; Paul, D. R.; Freeman, B. D., Fundamental water and salt transport properties of polymeric materials. Prog. Polym. Sci. 2014, 39, (1), 1-42.
615 616 617
(31) Hoek, E. M. V.; Kim, A. S.; Elimelech, M., Influence of crossflow membrane filter geometry and shear rate on colloidal fouling in reverse osmosis and nanofiltration separations. Environ. Eng. Sci. 2002, 19, 357-372.
618 619
(32) Sutzkover, I.; Hasson, D.; Semiat, R., Simple technique for measuring the concentration polarization level in a reverse osmosis system. Desalination 2000, 131, (1-3), 117-127.
620 621 622
(33) Tang, C. Y.; Kwon, Y.-N.; Leckie, J. O., Effect of membrane chemistry and coating layer on physiochemical properties of thin film composite polyamide RO and NF membranes. Desalination 2009, 242, (1-3), 149-167.
623 624
(34) Henis, J. M. S.; Tripodi, M. K., Composite hollow fiber membranes for gas separation: the resistance model approach. J. Membr. Sci. 1981, 8, 233-246.
625 626
(35) Koros, W. J.; Fleming, G. K., Membrane-based gas separation. J. Membr. Sci. 1993, 83, (1), 1-80.
627 628 629
(36) Sagle, A. C.; Van Wagner, E. M.; Ju, H.; McCloskey, B. D.; Freeman, B. D.; Sharma, M. M., PEG-coated reverse osmosis membranes: Desalination properties and fouling resistance. J. Membr. Sci. 2009, 340, 92-108.
630 631 632 633
(37) Van Wagner, E. M.; Sagle, A. C.; Sharma, M. M.; La, Y.-H.; Freeman, B. D., Surface modification of commercial polyamide desalination membranes using poly(ethylene glycol) diglycidyl ether to enhance membrane fouling resistance. J. Membr. Sci. 2011, 367, 273287.
634 635 636
(38) Horner, A.; Zocher, F.; Preiner, J.; Ollinger, N.; Siligan, C.; Akimov, S. A.; Pohl, P., The mobility of single-file water molecules is governed by the number of H-bonds they may form with channel-lining residues. Sci. Adv. 2015, 1, e1400083.
637 638
(39) Wijmans, J. G.; Baker, R. W., The solution-diffusion model: a review. J. Membr. Sci. 1995, 107, (1-2), 1-21.
639 640 641
(40) Schwarzenbach, R. P.; Escher, B. I.; Fenner, K.; Hofstetter, T. B.; Johnson, C. A.; von Gunten, U.; Wehrli, B., The challenge of micropollutants in aquatic systems. Science 2006, 313, (5790), 1072-7.
642 643 644
(41) Shen, M.; Keten, S.; Lueptow, R. M., Dynamics of water and solute transport in polymeric reverse osmosis membranes via molecular dynamics simulations. J. Membr. Sci. 2016, 506, 95-108.
645 646
(42) Cohen, M. H.; Turnbull, D., Molecular Transport in Liquids and Glasses. J. Chem. Phys. 1959, 31, 1164-1169.
647
(43) Bondi, A., van der Waals volumes and radii. J. Phys. Chem. 1964, 68, (3), 441-451. 22 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 31
Page 23 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
648 649 650
(44) Zhao, Y. H.; Abraham, M. H.; Zissimos, A. M., Fast calculation of van der Waals volume as a sum of atomic and bond contributions and its application to drug compounds. J. Org. Chem. 2003, 68, (19), 7368-73.
651 652
(45) Deen, W. M., Hindered transport of large molecules in liquid filled pores. AIChE J. 1987, 33, 1409-1425.
653 654
(46) Bungay, P. M.; Brenner, H., The motion of a closely-fitting sphere in a fluid-filled tube. Int. J. Multiphase Flow 1973, 1, 25-56.
655 656 657
(47) Boo, C.; Wang, Y.; Zucker, I.; Choo, Y.; Osuji, C. O.; Elimelech, M., High Performance Nanofiltration Membrane for Effective Removal of Perfluoroalkyl Substances at High Water Recovery. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2018, 52, (13), 7279-7288.
658 659
(48) Nghiem, L. D.; Schäfer, A. I.; Elimelech, M., Nanofiltration of Hormone Mimicking Trace Organic Contaminants. Sep. Sci. Technol. 2005, 40, (13), 2633-2649.
660 661 662
(49) Mitch, W. A.; Sharp, J. O.; Trussell, R. R.; Valentine, R. L.; Alvarez-Cohen, L.; Sedlak, D. L., N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) as a drinking water contaminant: A review. Environ. Eng. Sci. 2003, 20, (5), 389-404.
663 664
(50) Richter, R.; Bérat, R.; Brisson, A., Formation of solid-supported lipid bilayers: an integrated view. Langmuir 2006, 3497-3505.
665 666 667 668
(51) Kłosowski, M. M.; McGilvery, C. M.; Li, Y.; Abellan, P.; Ramasse, Q.; Cabral, J. T.; Livingston, A. G.; Porter, A. E., Micro-to nano-scale characterisation of polyamide structures of the SW30HR RO membrane using advanced electron microscopy and stain tracers. J. Membr. Sci. 2016, 520, 465-476.
669 670 671
(52) Pacheco, F.; Sougrat, R.; Reinhard, M.; Leckie, J. O.; Pinnau, I., 3D visualization of the internal nanostructure of polyamide thin films in RO membranes. J. Membr. Sci. 2016, 501, 33-44.
672 673
(53) Karan, S.; Jiang, Z.; Livingston, A. G., Sub-10 nm polyamide nanofilms with ultrafast solvent transport for molecular separation. Science 2015, 348, 1347-1351.
674 675 676
(54) Park, S.-J.; Ahn, W.-G.; Choi, W.; Park, S.-H.; Lee, J. S.; Jung, H. W.; Lee, J.-H., A facile and scalable fabrication method for thin film composite reverse osmosis membranes: duallayer slot coating. J. Mater. Chem. A 2017, 5, 6648-6655.
677 678 679
(55) Epsztein, R.; Cheng, W.; Shaulsky, E.; Dizge, N.; Elimelech, M., Elucidating the mechanisms underlying the difference between chloride and nitrate rejection in nanofiltration. J. Membr. Sci. 2017, 548, 694-701.
680
23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
681 682
Table of Contents Graphic
24 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 24 of 31
Page 25 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
683 684
Figure 1. The two main designs of composite biomimetic desalination membranes considered in
685
this study. (A) The biomimetic active layer, comprising amphiphilic block copolymers and
686
biological or synthetic water channels, is formed directly on an ultrafiltration (UF) membrane.
687
Defects in the biomimetic layer expose the underlying pores. UF membrane pore diameters of 3,
688
5, and 8 nm are considered. (B) The biomimetic active layer is formed on a “dense” size-
689
selective membrane, such as fully-aromatic polyamide reverse-osmosis (RO) membranes and
690
semi-aromatic polyamide nanofiltration (NF) membranes. Defects in the biomimetic layer
691
expose the polyamide layer.
692
25 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
693 694
Figure 2. Projected water permeation through biomimetic membranes with various support
695
layers. (A) Water permeability in defect-free regions of a composite biomimetic membrane, ABM,
696
as a function of the support-layer permeability, ASL. Measured support-layer permeabilities
697
(Table 1) and a biomimetic layer permeability, ABL, corresponding to 3% aquaporin-Z (AqpZ) by
698
area were used in eq 6 for calculations. A water permeability of 2.54 L m-2 h-1 bar-1 was used for
699
the biomimetic active layer, which was calculated from the single-channel permeability of
700
AqpZ.25, 38 (B) Defect-driven flow of pure water as a function of support layer type and the total
701
defect area in the biomimetic active layer. Normalized flow through defects was determined
702
using eqs 7 and 8 for the labeled support layers and an active layer comprising 3% AqpZ.
26 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 26 of 31
Page 27 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
703 704
Figure 3. Projected salt rejection, Ro, for composite biomimetic desalination membranes
705
comprising a defect-containing biomimetic active layer with 3% aquaporin-Z formed on
706
different support layers. Transport was modeled at standard seawater RO (SWRO) test
707
conditions (55.1 bar applied pressure, 32000 ppm NaCl) with a mass transfer coefficient of 140
708
L m-2 h-1. The green shaded area corresponds to rejections greater than 99.85%, the highest
709
rejection currently achieved by polyamide thin-film composite membranes.5, 6 Dash-dotted drop
710
lines correspond to the maximum defect area, θ, able to achieve this rejection level when using a
711
porous support layer (blue, UF-3; 0.002%) and a highly-rejecting dense support layer (black,
712
RO-HR, 16%).
713 714
27 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
715 716
Figure 4. Neutral solute permeation through aromatic polyamide reverse-osmosis (RO)
717
membranes considered as model support layers for biomimetic desalination membranes. (A)
718
Real solute rejection, Rr, as a function of molecular weight through a “high-rejection” RO
719
membrane (RO-HR, SW30XLE, Dow) and a “high-permeability” RO membrane (RO-HP, XLE,
720
Dow). (B) Solute permeability (P in m/s) as a function of the van der Waals radius, rvdw.
721
Regression lines were used to determine parameters for eq 14. Solute characteristics and
722
measurements are listed in Table S1. Some data for RO-HR are from ref 25 (Table S1).
723
Measurements were conducted at 25.0 ± 0.5 ºC, pH 7.0 ± 0.5, and 21 cm/s crossflow velocity,
724
with applied pressures of 15.5 bar for RO-HR and 8.6 bar for RO-HP.
725 726 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 28 of 31
Page 29 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
727 728
Figure 5. Projected observed solute rejections, Ro, for neutral solutes and micropollutants.
729
Rejection was calculated from hydrophobicity-based permeability relationships for the
730
biomimetic active layer and size-based permeability relationships for the support layer. For the
731
biomimetic active layer, eq 12 was used to estimate permeability from the solute octanol-water
732
partition coefficient (Kow), considering a defect-free layer with 3% aquaporin-Z and a polymer
733
matrix based on poly(1,2-butadiene)-poly(ethylene oxide) (PB-PEO). PB-PEO has a relatively
734
low permeability for bilayer structures.25 For reverse-osmosis membranes (RO-HP and RO-HR)
735
as model support layers, composite permeabilities were calculated using eq 14 with parameters
736
determined from Figure 4. For nanofiltration (NF) and ultrafiltration (UF-3) membranes as
737
model support layers, rejections were calculated using eqs 15−17 and pore radii of 0.51 nm for
738
NF (from thymol, Table S2) and 1.5 nm for UF-3. Overlaid are the properties of micropollutants
739
of interest during reuse of municipal wastewater, which are listed in Table S3. Rejection was
740
calculated for 15.5 bar applied pressure, 1000 ppm NaCl feed, and a mass transfer coefficient of
741
140 L m-2 h-1.
742
29 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
743 744
Figure 6. Projected permeation of important neutral solutes. (A) Measured permeabilities of
745
boron (as boric acid) and 1,4-dioxane for thin-film composite RO and NF membranes as model
746
support layers for a biomimetic desalination membrane. Observed boron rejection by NF (NF-
747
270) was 5.3 ± 1.5% at 5.0 bar, corresponding to a permeability of 660 ± 180 L m-2 h-1 if the
748
solution–diffusion model is used. (B) Projected observed rejection of boron and 1,4-dioxane by a
749
composite biomimetic desalination membrane comprising various support layers and a selective
750
layer with 3% aquaporin-Z, an amphiphilic matrix of either poly(1,2-butadiene)-poly(ethylene
751
oxide) (PB-PEO) or poly(methoxazoline)-poly(dimethylsiloxane)-poly(methoxazoline) (MDM),
752
and 1% defect area. Boron rejections were calculated for standard seawater RO test conditions
753
(55.1 bar, 32000 ppm NaCl) using permeabilities explicitly measured for each material at pH 7.
754
Dioxane permeability was too rapid to be measured for the polymeric matrices using solution-
755
based techniques (Figure S7). Dioxane permeability was therefore estimated from its log Kow
756
(−0.27) using eq 12, and rejection was calculated for 15.5 bar applied pressure and a feed of
757
1000 ppm NaCl. Mass transfer coefficients of 140 L m-2 h-1 were used in all cases.
758
30 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 30 of 31
Page 31 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
759
Table 1. Measured water and salt permeabilities for membranes considered as model support
760
layers for a composite biomimetic desalination membrane. Permeabilities were measured for RO
761
and NF membranes and calculated for UF membranes.
support layer type
reverse osmosis (RO)
nanofiltration (NF) ultrafiltration (UF)
no support
considered example
SW30XLE, Dow (RO-HR) XLE, Dow (RO-HP) NF270, Dow (NF) 3 nm pores (UF-3)a 5 nm pores (UF-5)a 8 nm pores (UF-8)a --
water NaCl permeability, permeability, A (L m−2 h−1 B (L m−2 −1 bar ) h−1)
measured NaCl rejection, Ro (%)c
projected water permeability, A, with biomimetic layer (L m−2 h−1 bar−1)d 3% 10% AqpZ AqpZ
2.20 ± 0.02
0.26 ± 0.06
98.6 ± 0.3
1.18
1.74
5.57 ± 0.38
0.93 ± 0.08
95.8 ± 0.5
1.74
3.35
20.5 ± 0.5
52.7 ± 3.8b
38.7 ± 2.0
2.26
5.95
114
--
--
2.48
7.81
316
--
--
2.52
8.17
809
--
--
2.53
8.30
--
--
--
2.54
8.39
762 2 b
763
a
764
ion rejection varies with ionic strength and pH.55 The tabulated value was determined for 2000 ppm NaCl,
765
pH 7, and 25 ºC, measured at 3.5, 5.0, and 6.5 bar. c Measured using 2000 ppm NaCl at pH 7, 25 ºC and
766
21 cm/s crossflow at 15.5, 8.6, and 5.0 bar for SW30XLE, XLE, and NF270, respectively. d Calculated
767
using eq 6.
Assumed monodisperse pores with 10% surface porosity and 100-nm active layer thickness.
768 769 770 771 772
31 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
NF-270