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Energy and the Environment
Advanced Anti-Fouling Membranes for Osmotic Power Generation from Wastewater via Pressure Retarded Osmosis (PRO) Gang Han, Jiang Tao Liu, Kangjia Lu, and Tai-Shung Chung Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b05933 • Publication Date (Web): 09 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 10, 2018
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Advanced Anti-Fouling Membranes for Osmotic
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Power Generation from Wastewater via Pressure
3
Retarded Osmosis (PRO)
4
Gang Han,# Jiang Tao Liu,# Kang Jia Lu, Tai-Shung Chung*
5 6
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, National University of Singapore,
7
Singapore 117585
8 9
Correspondence to: Tai-Shung Chung (Email:
[email protected])
10
Tel: +65-65166645; Fax: +65-67791936
11
#
The first two authors contributed equally to this work
12 13
ABSTRACT: A facile and versatile approach was demonstrated for the fabrication of low-
14
fouling pressure retarded osmosis (PRO) membranes for osmotic power generation from highly
15
polluted wastewater. A water-soluble zwitterionic random copolymer with superior
16
hydrophilicity and unique chemistry was molecularly designed and synthesized via a single-step
17
free-radical polymerization between 2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine (MPC) and 2-
18
aminoethyl methacrylate hydrochloride (AEMA). The P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer was then
19
chemically grafted onto the surface of PES&Torlon hollow fibers via amino groups coupling of
20
poly(AEMA) with the polyimide structures of Torlon, leaving the zwitterions of poly(MPC) in
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the feed solution. Due to the outstanding hydrophilicity, unique cationic and anionic groups and 1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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electrical neutrality of the zwitterionic brush, the newly developed membrane showed great
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resistances to both inorganic scaling and organic fouling in PRO operations. When using a real
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wastewater brine comprising multi-foulants as the feed, the P[MPC-co-AEMA] modified
25
membrane exhibits a much lower flux decline of 37% at ∆P=0 bar after 24-h tests and a smaller
26
power density decrease of 28% at ∆P=15 bar within 12-h tests, compared to 61% and 42%
27
respectively for the unmodified one. In addition to the low fouling tendency, the modified
28
membrane shows outstanding performance stability and fouling reversibility, where the flux is
29
almost fully recovered by physical backwash of water at 15 bar for 0.5 h. This study would
30
provide valuable insights and strategies for the design and fabrication of effective antifouling
31
materials and membranes for PRO osmotic power generation.
32 33
TOC Art
34 35 36
1. INTRODUCTION
37
The rapid growth in energy consumption and CO2 emission have stimulated worldwide search
38
for alternative energy sources. Salinity-gradient energy that is released from the mixing of water
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streams with different salinities is an unexploited resource of clean energy.1-3 By employing a
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semipermeable membrane to control the mixing process, salinity-gradient energy can be 2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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harvested via pressure retarded osmosis (PRO).4-6 In a typical PRO process, driven by the
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osmotic pressure gradient, water permeates through the membrane from the feed solution into the
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draw solution with a higher salinity against an uphill trans-membrane hydraulic pressure.1-7 The
44
salinity energy is therefore converted to osmotic power by releasing the hydraulic head generated
45
by the permeating water through an energy exchange device such as a hydro-turbine or pressure
46
exchanger. Because the global potential of osmotic power is projected to be huge with negligible
47
chemical usage or CO2 emissions, PRO becomes an important strategic thrust in solving global
48
energy and sustainability puzzles.4-9
49
In theory, power density (i.e., osmotic energy output per unit membrane area) of a PRO
50
membrane is determined by the product of the hydraulic pressure applied on the draw solution
51
and the water flux across the membrane.3-9 As a result, the concentrated brine from seawater
52
desalination and discharged effluents from municipal wastewater plants are recently utilized as
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the feed pairs for PRO processes because of their high salinity gradient and merits of converting
54
waste to energy.10-14 The integration of PRO and seawater desalination also alleviates the
55
disposal problem of high-salinity brine and makes the desalination process less energy dependent
56
and more sustainable.15,16
57
In addition to find suitable feed pairs with a large salinity gradient, development of high
58
performance membranes with a high water flux and great mechanical stability is another focus in
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PRO research. Many advances on the design and fabrication of effective PRO membranes have
60
been made using deionized water as the feed.6,17 However, fouling on PRO membranes is a big
61
challenge which significantly limits the process viability and membrane efficiency particularly
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when using highly polluted solutions as the feeds.18-24 The unique water transport in PRO
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processes tends to drag foulants toward the porous substrate underneath the dense-selective layer
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of PRO membranes. Using the state-of-the-art PRO membranes, thin-film composite (TFC)
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membranes,25-30 as an example. Since they comprise a polyamide dense-selective skin and a
66
porous substrate layer, and the porous substrate faces the feed solution in PRO operations,
67
foulants such as inorganic salts, colloids, and organic matters in the feed are easily accumulated
68
inside the porous substrate by the water flow across the membranes. Not only do they
69
dramatically enhance internal concentration polarization (ICP) but also critically deteriorate the
70
effective osmotic pressure gradient for power generation.31-33 In addition, the formation of
71
fouling deep inside the substrate makes membrane cleaning sophisticated and difficult because of
72
high tortuosity in the substrate. As a result, how to effectively mitigate membrane fouling and
73
improve fouling reversibility within the porous substrate layer remains a major challenge for the
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commercialization of PRO technology.
75
Therefore, this study aims to develop effective fouling resistant materials and antifouling
76
membranes to maximize the PRO efficiency for osmotic power generation. Zwitterionic
77
materials consisting of positively and negatively charged groups with the overall electrically
78
neutral show the potential.34-38 Electrostatically induced hydration of the zwitterions would form
79
a highly hydrated surface and results in outstanding hydrophilicity to inhibit the adsorption of
80
foulants.35,36 In order to take advantages of such zwitterionic materials in a simple and
81
straightforward way, a novel random copolymer comprising 2-methacryloyloxyethyl
82
phosphorylcholine (MPC) and 2-aminoethyl methacrylate (AEMA) was molecularly designed
83
and synthesized via a one-pot free-radical polymerization. As illustrated in Figure 1, the P[MPC-
84
co-AEMA] copolymer possesses a zwitterionic poly(MPC) segment that contains of positively
85
charged ammonium cations and negatively charged phosphate anions and a poly(AEMA)
86
segment with terminated amino groups. The poly(MPC) side chains perform as the fouling-
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resistant polymer brushes while the amino groups of the poly(AEMA) segment function as
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anchors to efficiently graft the copolymer onto the surface of the PES&Torlon hollow fiber
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membrane through covalent bonds with the polyimide groups of Torlon.
90
91 92
Figure 1. Schematic procedures for the fabrication of zwitterionic copolymer modified TFC-
93
PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] hollow fiber membranes with mitigated propensity for PRO.
94 95
The structure and chemistry of the synthesized P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer would be
96
systematically characterized. After that, the morphology, hydrophilicity and transport properties
97
of the pristine and copolymer modified TFC hollow fiber membranes as well as their PRO
98
performance would be evaluated. Lastly, the fouling behaviors, antifouling performance and
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fouling reversibility of the newly developed membranes for osmotic power generation would be
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investigated using a real wastewater brine as the feed. This work may open up a new avenue in
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the fabrication of zwitterionic materials functionalized antifouling membranes for PRO osmotic
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power generation.
103 104
2. EXPERIMENTAL AND METHODS
105
2.1 Synthesis of the Zwitterionic Copolymer P[MPC-co-AEMA]
106
The zwitterionic random copolymer P[MPC-co-AEMA] was synthesized via a modified free-
107
radical polymerization between 2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine (MPC) and 2-
108
aminoethyl methacrylate hydrochloride (AEMA) using 2,2'-azobis(2-methylpropionitrile) (AIBN)
109
as the initiator,39 as illustrated in Figure S1. The detailed specifications of chemicals and
110
procedures for copolymer synthesis and purification are disclosed in the Supporting Information
111
(SI).
112 113
2.2 Fabrication of TFC-PES&Torlon Hollow Fiber Membranes
114
A PES&Torlon hollow fiber substrate was firstly prepared via a dry-jet wet spinning process.29,40
115
After that, a polyamide dense-selective thin film was formed on the inner surface (i.e., the lumen
116
side) of the hollow fibers via interfacial polymerization between m-phenylenediamine (MPD)
117
and trimesoyl chloride (TMC). Table S1 summarizes the specific spinning parameters, and the
118
detailed experimental procedures of fiber preparation, module fabrication and interfacial
119
polymerization reaction are similar to our previous works.29,41
120 121
2.3 Modification of TFC-PES&Torlon Membranes by the Zwitterionic Copolymer
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The outer surface of TFC-PES&Torlon hollow fiber membrane was modified by chemically
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grafting the synthesized P[MPC-co-AEMA] zwitterionic copolymer as follows. A 0.8 wt %
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coating solution was prepared by dissolving the copolymer in a 9:1 (wt %) mixture of 2-propanol
125
and water at room temperature. The P[MPC-co-AEMA] coating solution was slowly flowed
126
through the shell side of the module at 75 °C for 1.5 h. After the modification, the fibers were
127
carefully rinsed with deionized water to remove excess agents and then kept in deionized water
128
for further characterizations. The P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer modified TFC-PES&Torlon
129
membrane was termed as TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA].
130 131
2.4 Characterizations
132
Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy was performed by a Bio-Rad FTS 135 Fourier
133
transform infrared spectrophotometer and the diffuse reflectance spectra were scanned over the
134
range of 400–4000 cm-1. Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) tests were carried out on a
135
Waters GPC system. Ultrapure water was used as the eluent and a calibration curve was
136
generated using polyethylene oxides as molecular weight standards. Membrane morphology was
137
observed by a field-emission scanning electron microscope (FESEM JEOL JSM-6700LV). The
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contact angle of water on the outer surface of hollow fibers was carried out on a KSV Sigma 701
139
Tensiometer (KSV Instruments Ltd., Finland). Surface chemistry of the membranes was
140
analyzed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS, Kratos AXIS Ultra DLD spectrometer,
141
Kratos Analytical Ltd.) with a monochromatized Al Kα X-ray source (1486.71 eV photons).
142
The effective mean pore size, pore size distribution and molecular weight cut-off (MWCO) of
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the hollow fiber substrates were measured via solute rejection experiments using polyethylene
144
glycols (PEG) as the neutral rejection probes.42,43 Mass transport characteristics, including pure
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water permeability coefficient (A, in L m-2 h-1 bar-1) and NaCl rejection (R, %) of the TFC hollow
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fiber membranes were characterized by testing the membranes under the RO mode via a
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circulating RO filtration apparatus. The detailed procedures to measure A, R, salt permeability
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coefficient (B) and membrane structural parameter (S) were described in SI and our previous
149
works.41,44
150 151
2.5 Membrane Performance and Fouling Tests in PRO Operations
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A laboratory-scale crossflow PRO system was used for PRO performance tests and membrane
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fouling evaluation.41 NaCl solutions with various concentrations were used as the draw solutions.
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Deionized water was firstly utilized as the feed to obtain the benchmark PRO performance of the
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membranes. Then, a real wastewater brine collected from a local municipal wastewater recycling
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plant and synthetic solutions that contain single foulants were used as the feeds to investigate the
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membrane antifouling performance. The chemistry of the real wastewater brine was reported in
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our previous works,33,45 and the compositions of the synthetic feed solutions are tabulated in
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Table S2.
160
For the long-term fouling tests, the draw solution concentration was adjusted to achieve a
161
similar initial water flux for different fibers. The draw solution concentration was maintained
162
constant throughout each test by monitoring the solution conductivity. The reduction of water
163
flux or power density as a function of testing duration was monitored. Membrane cleaning was
164
performed by backwashing with water from the lumen into the shell side of the hollow fiber
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module at 15 bar for 30 min. Each PRO test was carried out three times and the averaged data
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were reported. In order to make the figures clearly visible, the error bar was not included in the
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reported figures.
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Environmental Science & Technology
The water permeation flux, Jw (in L m−2 h−1, abbreviated as LMH), was calculated from the feed volume change as:
Jw =
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∆V Sm∆t
(1)
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where ∆V (in L) was the permeation water collected over a predetermined testing duration ∆t (in
172
h). Membrane power density, W (in W/m2), was then computed as:
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W = ∆P × J w
(2)
174
where ∆P (in bar) was the hydraulic pressure difference across the membrane. The detailed
175
experimental setup, operating conditions, and the determination of water flux and membrane
176
power density can be found in SI.
177 178
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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3.1 Synthesis and Characterizations of the P[MPC-co-AEMA] Random Copolymer
180
As shown in Figure S1, the zwitterionic random P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer was prepared
181
through
182
phosphorylcholine (MPC) and 2-aminoethyl methacrylate hydrochloride (AEMA) in the
183
presence of 2,2'-azobis(2-methylpropionitrile) (AIBN) as the radical initiator. The synthesized
184
P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer has a number average molecular weight (Mn) and a weight
185
average molecular weight (Mw) of 41308 Da and 57034 Da, respectively, as summarized in
186
Table S3. It has a polydispersity index (PDI) of 1.38, suggesting that the copolymer has a
187
narrowly dispersed molecule weight distribution. The FTIR spectra confirm the chemistry of the
188
P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer. As displayed in Figure 2 (a), the strong peak around 1728 cm−1
189
is attributed to the C=O of the ester group, while the peaks at 1240, 1089 cm-1 and 970 cm−1 are
the
single-step
free-radical
polymerization
between
2-methacryloyloxyethyl
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from the −POCH2− and −N+(CH3) functional groups, respectively, suggesting the presence of the
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poly(MPC) segments. The absorptions at 1621 cm-1 and 700 cm-1 are due to the -NH2 groups
192
from the poly(AEMA) segments.46 Because of the zwitterionic chemistry of the P[MPC-co-
193
AEMA] copolymer, it shows excellent solubility in water and IPA.
194
195 196
Figure 2. (a) FTIR spectra of the P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer, (b) XPS wide scan spectra of
197
the outer surfaces of PES&Torlon and PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] hollow fiber
198
membranes, and (c) an enlarged P2p peak of the XPS spectra.
199 200
3.2. Characterizations of the Pristine and Copolymer Modified PES&Torlon Hollow Fiber
201
Substrates
202
The PES&Torlon hollow fiber membrane was designed and fabricated as the substrate for the
203
thin-film composite (TFC) PRO membrane. The incorporation of a certain amount of Torlon into
204
the PES polymer aims to improve the reactivity of the fiber because the polyimide groups of
205
Torlon can react with the amino groups (-NH2) of the poly(AEMA) segments of the copolymer.
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As a result, a zwitterionic functional layer can be covalently grafted onto the PES&Torlon fiber
207
without using a transition layer.
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209 210
Figure 3. FESEM images of (a-e) the as-spun PES&Torlon hollow fiber substrate and (f) the
211
P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer modified outer surface.
212 213
Figure 3 (a-e) shows the membrane morphology of the as-spun PES&Torlon hollow fiber
214
substrate. It has a highly concentric structure with an inner diameter of 680 µm and a cross-
215
section thickness of 160 µm. Due to the fast phase inversion behavior induced by the water bore
216
fluid, the fiber possesses a smooth and dense inner surface without any large pores. This surface
217
characteristic is critical for interfacial polymerization to form a stable and less defective
218
polyamide rejection layer on top of the substrate.47 The strong water bore fluid also induces a
219
highly porous cross-section structure with a fully open cell microstructure and some finger-like
220
macrovoids, which facilitate water and salt transportation across the membrane. In order to
221
further reduce transporting resistance and internal concentration polarization (ICP), an open
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porous outer surface is fabricated by employing a dope-solvent co-extrusion technology during
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which a pure NMP solvent is fed at the outer channel of the tri-orifice spinneret.41,44 Table 1
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summarizes the mean pore diameter (µp), pure water permeability (PWP), molecular weight cut-
225
off (MWCO) and water contact angle at the outer surface of the PES&Torlon hollow fiber, while
226
Figure S2 shows its pore size distribution. It has a relatively narrow pore size distribution with a
227
mean pore diameter of 17.8 nm. As a result, a high PWP of 126.8 L m-2 h-1 bar-1 and a MWCO of
228
292.5 KDa are obtained. Since both PES and Torlon polymers are relatively hydrophobic, the
229
PES&Torlon fiber has a water contact angle of 70.9°.
230 231
Table 1. Summary of the mean effective pore size (µp), PWP, MWCO, outer surface water
232
contact angle and dimension of the hollow fiber substrates Fiber ID
µp
σp
MWCO
Contact
OD/ID
[L/(m ·bar·h)]
(KDa)
angle (°)
(µm)
2
(nm)
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PWP
PES&Torlon
17.8
1.67
126.8
292.5
70.9
1000/680
PES&TorlonP[MPC-co-AEMA]
16.6
1.55
185.4
220.0
40.0
1000/680
The tests were performed from the outer surface to the inner one of hollow fibers at 1 bar.
234 235
After grafting the P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer, a uniform coating layer is formed on the
236
outer surface of the modified PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] hollow fiber, as depicted in
237
Figure 3 (f). Compared to the pristine PES&Torlon fiber, the outer surface also becomes
238
relatively smooth and dense. The XPS data presented in Figure 2 (b) and Table S4 show the
239
unique P2s and P2p peaks of the P element on the modified outer surface. The significant
240
increases in N and O element concentrations and the decreases in C and S element contents
241
further confirm the successful graft of the P[MPC-co-AEMA] copolymer. Since a more 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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hydrophilic zwitterionic copolymer layer is introduced onto the outer surface, the membrane
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hydrophilicity is dramatically improved. As a result, the water contact angle drops from 70.9° to
244
40° after the modification (Table 1). The P[MPC-co-AEMA] coating also induces a slight
245
reduction in membrane pore size. As shown in Figure S2, the mean pore diameter drops to 16.6
246
nm and the pore size distribution becomes narrower. Consequently, the MWCO of PES&Torlon-
247
P[MPC-co-AEMA] fiber decreases to 220 KDa. Nevertheless, the PWP value increases to 185.4
248
L m-2 h-1 bar-1 because of the enhanced hydrophilicity and the lowered transport resistance. In
249
summary, the P[MPC-co-AEMA] modification significantly enhances the membrane surface
250
hydrophilicity, reduces the transport resistance, slightly lowers the membrane pore size and
251
narrows the pore size distribution.
252 253
3.3. Characterizations of TFC Hollow Fiber Membranes
254
Figure 4 shows the morphology of the polyamide dense-selective layer of the TFC hollow fiber
255
membranes that was synthesized on the inner surface of the hollow fiber substrate via interfacial
256
polymerization. The polyamide thin film has a typical “ridge-and-valley” morphology with a low
257
thickness of around 180 nm. This thin and rough structure is crucial for the TFC membrane to
258
achieve high water permeation and high power density.
259
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Figure 4. FESEM images of the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] hollow fiber membrane
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with an inner polyamide selective skin and a copolymer coating layer on the outer surface.
263 264
Table 2 summarizes the intrinsic properties of the newly developed TFC hollow fiber
265
membranes in terms of pure water permeability (A), salt permeability coefficient (B), and
266
membrane structural parameter (S). The TFC-PES&Torlon and TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-
267
AEMA] membranes possess very similar A values of 1.1 and 1.2 L m-2 h-1 bar-1 with ultralow B
268
values of 0.020 and 0.023 L m-2 h-1, respectively. The slightly improved water permeability of
269
the PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membrane is mainly resulted from the enhanced substrate
270
hydrophilicity. Since the two TFC membranes have the same polyamide selective layer, the
271
improvement is not significant. In addition, the structural parameters of TFC-PES&Torlon and
272
TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membranes are 1147 µm and 1731 µm, respectively. The
273
slightly increased structural parameter of the latter is likely due to the smaller pore size and
274
narrower pore size distribution of the substrate fiber as shown in Table 1 and Figure S2.
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Table 2. Transport properties and structural parameters of the TFC hollow fiber membranes Membrane ID
Water permeability, A 2
[L/(m ·bar·h)] at 1 bar
Salt permeability, B −2
−1
(L m h )
Km 5
S −1
(×10 s m )
(µm)
TFC-PES&Torlon
1.1
0.020
7.7
1147
TFC-PES&Torlon-
1.2
0.023
11.7
1731
P[MPC-co-AEMA] 277 278
The mechanical stability of the two TFC hollow fiber membranes was assessed by measuring
279
their PWP values and NaCl rejections at various hydraulic pressures. As displayed in Figure S3,
280
both fibers can withstand a high pressure of larger than 20 bar. Compared to the PWP measured
281
at 1 bar, the PWP values of both fibers slightly increase with an increase in operating pressure.
282
The small increases in PWP at high pressures are possibly attributed to the effects of high hoop
283
stresses on the inner polyamide dense-selective layer. With the rise in pressure, the rejections to
284
NaCl of the two fibers continuously increase and reach 98-99% at 20 bar, suggesting superior
285
membrane strength and stability. These transport characteristics and mechanical strength make
286
the two TFC hollow fibers suitable for PRO applications.48
287 288
3.4 Implications of the TFC Hollow Fiber Membranes for Osmotic Power Generation
289
The newly developed TFC hollow fiber membranes were evaluated for osmotic power
290
generation using deionized water and a real wastewater brine as the feeds. Figure 5 compares
291
their water fluxes (Jw) and power density (W) as a function of operating pressure (∆P) using a 1.0
292
M NaCl synthetic brine as the draw solution. The TFC-PES&Torlon and TFC-PES&Torlon-
293
P[MPC-co-AEMA] membranes have Jw values of 32.0 and 22.5 LMH at ∆P=0 bar, respectively,
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when using deionized water as the feed (Figure 5 (a)). The difference in Jw is mainly due to their
295
variation in membrane structural parameter (S) (Table 2). With an increase in ∆P, Jw shows a
296
rapid decrease because of the lowered driving force and membrane compaction. Since the
297
membrane power density (W) is the product of Jw and ∆P, W rapidly increases with an increase
298
in ∆P and reaches the highest values of 13.5 and 10.2 W/m2 at ∆P=20 bar for the TFC-
299
PES&Torlon and TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membranes, respectively (Figure 5 (b)).
300
301 302
Figure 5. Water flux (Jw) and power density (W) of the TFC hollow fiber membranes as a
303
function of operating pressure using (a, b) deionized water and (c, d) real wastewater brine as
304
feed solutions. (Draw solution was 1 M NaCl solution and the testing duration at each pressure
305
was 30 min).
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However, when the feed is changed from deionized water to the real wastewater brine, both
308
membranes exhibit dramatic decreases in Jw and W and the drop is more significant for the TFC-
309
PES&Torlon membrane. As depicted in Figure 5 (c) and (d), Jw of the TFC-PES&Torlon
310
membrane at ∆P=0 bar drops from 32.0 to 20.5 LMH, while its W at ∆P=20 bar decreases from
311
13.5 to 6.8 W/m2, implying that fouling caused by the wastewater brine is significant and
312
happens immediately with the permeation of water. In contrary, the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-
313
co-AEM] membrane displays mild declines in Jw and W when changing the feed to the
314
wastewater brine. It achieves a W of 8.6 W/m2 at ∆P=20 bar which is even higher than that of the
315
TFC-PES&Torlon membrane. This demonstrates the good antifouling properties of the
316
zwitterionic copolymer modified TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEM] membrane.
317 318
3.5 Antifouling Performance of TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] Membranes
319
The PRO fouling behaviors of TFC-PES&Torlon and TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA]
320
membranes were further assessed by conducting long-term tests. The initial water fluxes of the
321
two membranes were controlled to be almost the same by adjusting the draw solution
322
concentration. Figure 6 (a, b) shows the variations of the normalized Jw of the two TFC
323
membranes as a function of testing duration at ∆P=0 bar using deionized water and real
324
wastewater brine as the feeds, respectively. Both membranes display very mild flux declines of
325
less than 10% even after 24-h tests when using deionized water as the feed. Since the draw
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solution concentration was maintained throughout the tests, the flux decrease is mainly resulted
327
from the increased feed salinity and ICP caused by the reverse salt diffusion.
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Figure 6. Normalized water fluxes and power density of TFC-PES&Torlon and TFC-
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PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] hollow fiber membranes as a function of time at (a, b) ∆P=0
332
and (c, d) ∆P=15 bar using deionized water and real wastewater brine as feeds, respectively.
333
(The initial water fluxes for the two fibers at each pressure were maintained almost the same by
334
adjusting draw solution concentration).
335 336
However, when the real wastewater brine was utilized as the feed, the TFC-PES&Torlon
337
membrane shows a fast and dramatic flux decline in a very short duration. Its Jw decreases to 80%
338
of the initial value during the first 100 min, suggesting that fouling and its induced ICP play
339
primary roles in flux drop in the early stage of PRO tests as they happen very fast. In contrary, Jw
340
of the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membrane remains a high value and the flux
341
decline during such a short period is less than 7%. This indicates that fouling is effectively 18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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retarded by the zwitterionic copolymer coating. With a further increase in testing duration, both
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Jw values of TFC-PES&Torlon and TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membranes rapidly
344
decrease to 52% and 74% of the initial fluxes when the testing duration reaches 400 min, and
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then slightly drop to 39% and 63% at a high duration of 1440 min, respectively. In other words,
346
the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membrane shows a much lower flux drop of 37%,
347
compared to 61% of the TFC-PES&Torlon membrane during 24-h tests.
348
A similar phenomenon was observed for both membranes at a ∆P=15 bar, but the decreases of
349
Jw and W are less than those at ∆P=0 bar, mainly because of the lower initial water flux at a
350
higher pressure. As presented in Figure 6 (c, d), the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA]
351
membrane displays slower and less Jw and W declines than the TFC-PES&Torlon membrane
352
particularly at a relatively short testing duration. After a 12-h operation, a small drop of 28% in
353
Jw and W is achieved by the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membrane; however, Jw and
354
W of the TFC-PES&Torlon membrane decrease to 58% of the initial values. Again, these data
355
confirm the superior fouling resistance provided by the zwitterionic copolymer coating to the
356
real wastewater brine even at high operating pressures for PRO.
357
In order to understand the fouling behavior of the real wastewater brine and the antifouling
358
properties of the newly developed membranes, a series of fouling tests were performed by using
359
synthetic solutions that contain various types of foulants with the same or higher concentrations
360
than those in wastewater brine as the feeds (Table S2). As displayed in Figure S4, the flux
361
declines induced by alginate organic fouling, silica colloidal fouling and CaSO4 scaling are mild,
362
while the CaHPO4 scaling leads to a fast and dramatic flux drop. Clearly, the latter induces the
363
predominated fouling in previous PRO tests when using wastewater brine as the feed. Consistent
364
with the performance illustrated in Figure 6, the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA]
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365
membrane shows superior fouling resistance not only to organic foulants but also to inorganic
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scaling. Three reasons may be involved for this superior antifouling property. Firstly, a strong
367
hydration layer is formed above the P[MPC-co-AEMA] coating layer due to the excellent
368
hydrophilicity of the zwitterionic brush. Secondly, the electrostatic interactions between the
369
membrane surface and the foulants in the feed would be reduced by the net electrical neutrality
370
of the zwitterions.37,49 Lastly, the phosphonate functional groups of the zwitterions might act as
371
powerful chelating agents that form stable complexes with free Ca2+ ions and thus suppress
372
inorganic scaling.50
373 374
3.6 Multiple Fouling and Cleaning Cycles in PRO
375
Multiple PRO performances of the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membrane were
376
evaluated at ∆P=15 bar using the wastewater brine as the feed. Each cycle was performed for
377
720 min (or 12 h) and the fouled membrane was regenerated by physical backwashing of
378
freshwater from the lumen to the shell side of the module at 15 bar for 30 min. As presented in
379
Figure 7, the TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-AEMA] membrane shows quite stable PRO
380
performance for the second and third cycles. During the three PRO cycles of 2160 min in total,
381
the decreases of Jw and W are less than 30% of the initial values, much lower than those of the
382
pristine TFC-PES&Torlon membrane. In addition, the fouled TFC-PES&Torlon-P[MPC-co-
383
AEMA] membrane can be easily regenerated by water backwashing. The initial water flux can
384
be almost fully restored back to its original value with a great recovery of 95-98%, surpassing
385
that of 77-82% for the unmodified membrane. It is believed that the hydraulic pressure induced
386
cross flow during the backwash could help carry the accumulated salts and foulants out of the
387
substrate while the hydrophilic copolymer coating makes this process easy and efficient. Given
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the ease of membrane fabrication and the promising antifouling performance, this work may
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provide valuable insights for the design and fabrication of effective fouling-resistant materials
390
and membranes for PRO osmotic power generation.
391
392 393
Figure 7. Normalized water fluxes and power density vs. time of the TFC hollow fiber
394
membranes at ∆P=15 bar in PRO performance cycles using real wastewater brine as the feed.
395
(Membrane cleaning was performed by physical backwashing of freshwater at 15 bar for 0.5 h.
396
The numbers in the figure shows the flux recoveries after cleaning.).
397 398
Supporting Information
399
Materials and chemicals; membrane characterizations; synthetic route for the P[MPC-co-AEMA]
400
random copolymer (Figure S1); hollow fiber spinning conditions (Table S1); compositions of the
401
synthetic feed solutions (Table S2); GPC results (Table S3); pore size distribution of the hollow
402
fiber substrates (Figure S2) and XPS data (Table S4) of the hollow fibers; mechanical stability of 21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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the TFC hollow fiber membranes (Figure S3); long-term PRO performance at ∆P=0 bar using
404
synthetic feed solutions (Figure S4); and PRO operating conditions and performance evaluation.
405 406
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
407
This work is granted by the Singapore National Research Foundation under its Environmental
408
&Water Research Programme and administered by PUB, Singapore’s national water agency. It is
409
funded under the projects entitled "Membrane Development for Osmotic Power Generation, Part
410
1. Materials Development and Membrane Fabrication" (1102-IRIS-11-01) and NUS Grant no. R-
411
279-000-381-279; "Membrane Development for Osmotic Power Generation, Part 2. Module
412
Fabrication and System Integration" (1102-IRIS-11-02) and NUS Grant no. R-279-000-382-279.
413
The authors would also like to thank the undergraduate students Miss Yuyan Wang and Mr.
414
Shuai Jin for all their kind help on experiments work.
415 416
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