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Dual-Bioinspired Design for Constructing Membranes with Superhydrophobicity for Direct Contact Membrane Distillation Zhigao Zhu, Yuanren Liu, Haoqing Hou, Wenxin Shi, Fangshu Qu, Fuyi Cui, and Wei Wang Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b06227 • Publication Date (Web): 01 Feb 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 1, 2018
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Dual-Bioinspired Design for Constructing Membranes with
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Superhydrophobicity for Direct Contact Membrane Distillation
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Zhigao Zhua, Yuanren Liua, Haoqing Houb, Wenxin Shia, Fangshu Qua, Fuyi Cuia, Wei
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Wanga,*
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a
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School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150090, P. R. China
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b
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State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment (SKLUWRE),
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Jiangxi Normal University,
Nanchang 330022, P. R. China
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*Corresponding
13
Email address:
[email protected] (W. Wang)
Author
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ABSTRACT: Water flux and durability are the two critical parameters that closely
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associated with the practical application of membrane distillation (MD). Herein, we
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report a facile approach to fabricate superhydrophobic polyimide nanofibrous
19
membranes (PI NFMs) with hierarchical structures, interconnected pores and high
20
porosity, which was derived from the electrospinning, dual-bioinspired design and
21
fluorination
22
polydopamine/polyethyleneimine (PDA/PEI) composite was firstly linked onto
23
membrane substrates, and then assembled lotus leaf hierarchical structure by binding
24
the negatively charged silica nanoparticles (SiO2 NPs) via electrostatic attraction. The
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resultant superhydrophobic PI NFMs exhibits a water contact angle of 152o, robust
26
hot water resistance of 85 oC and high water entry pressure of 42 kPa. Moreover, the
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membrane with omniphobicity presents high water flux over 31 L m-2 h-1 and high
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salts rejection of ~100% as well as robust durability for treating high salinity
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wastewater containing typical low surface tension and dissolved contaminants
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(∆T=40 oC). Significantly, the novel dual-bioinspired method can be used as a
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universal tool to modify various materials with hierarchical structures, which is
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expected to provide more effective alternative membranes for MD and even for other
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selective wetting separation fields.
processes.
Bio-inspired
adhesive
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INTRODUCTION
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The ever-increasing geographical inequalities and deterioration of water quality
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impose an urgent task to develop appropriate technologies for wastewater treatment
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and make good utilization of abundant seawater resources.1-4 Among various
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technologies, membrane distillation (MD) using a hydrophobic microporous
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membrane has emerged as a promising method because it can utilize low-grade or
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waste heat to generate high-quality water with high recovery and high rejection of
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salts (100% in theory).5-7 MD is driven by a vapor pressure gradient induced by the
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different temperatures between a hot feed stream and a cold collected stream. The
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hydrophobic membrane aims at resisting the permeation of water droplets and
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allowing the transmission of water vapor, thus achieving the purpose of purification of
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seawater or treatment of wastewater.8
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Water flux and durability are the two critical parameters that closely associated
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with the practical application of MD for seawater desalination and wastewater
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treatment.9 Water flux is highly determined by the porous structure of the hydrophobic
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membrane.10-12 Various methods including mechanical fibrillation, template and melt
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blown, phase inversion as well as electrospinning methods have been employed to
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fabricate microporous membranes.13-16 It has been well-recognized that high porosity,
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narrow pore size distribution and low tortuosity structure can maximum increase the
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water vapor transmission.17-18 Durability of the MD membrane is another crucial issue,
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which is highly related to the hydrophobicity of membranes.19 An increase in
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hydrophobicity would slow the rate of crack formation and the capillary attraction of 3
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the water into the pore, thus reducing the surface pore wetting and wicking and
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maintaining the MD membrane stability.19 Some commercial hydrophobic
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microfiltration membranes were firstly used for MD, but most of them are generally
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suboptimal and suffer from progressive membrane wetting in the MD process.20 In
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recent years, two other methods have been developed for the design of
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superhydrophobic membranes. Both of them are based on the roughness construction
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and grafting or mixing with low surface energy materials. The first one is that the
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nanoparticles and hydrophobic agent was directly mixed with the as-prepared
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solutions for membrane preparation, but most nanoparticles embedded in the
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membrane matrix greatly reduced the utilization of nanoparticles for roughness
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construction.21-22 Moreover, the existence of wrinkles, nano-protrusions and
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nanoparticles may become the flaws of microporous membranes, thus deteriorating
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their physical and chemical properties.23-24 The second one is post treatment strategy
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for superhydrophobic surface modification of membrane.25 For example, polymer
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porous membrane was firstly etched by chemicals to form reactive functional groups,
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then served as substrates to construct membrane roughness.26-27 During the above
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processes, the structure of polymeric substrates, to some extent, were destroyed, and
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then affect the physical robustness of the MD membrane. Thus, it still requires a green
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method that can construct MD membrane with robust interconnected porous structure
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and excellent durability for MD performance.
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Electrospun nanofibrous membranes constructing from randomly accumulation
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of nanofibers leaded to an interconnected porous structure.28-30 Therefore, the 4
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electrospun products with high porosity have potential application in MD process due
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to ease transmission of water vapor across the hydrophobic membranes.18,31 Various
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chemical/coating methods have been used to construct nanofibrous membranes with
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roughness, but most of them are subjected to the damage of membrane as mentioned
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above. Recently, inspired by the unique adhesion and wettability of mussels in nature,
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polydopamine (PDA) containing catechol can serve as either the starting points or
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covalent modification with desired molecules during the in situ polymerization
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process.32-34 The coating layer can inspire the membrane surface with functional
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groups without destroying the substrate. In our design, dopamine plays
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dual-functional roles as both the adhesive and the starting points to graft positively
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charged PEI.35,36 After that, the positively charged nanofibrous membrane can
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uniformly and compactly bind the negatively charged SiO2 NPs with excellent
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stability via electrostatic attraction. However, the studies on fabrication of such
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dual-bioinspired membranes with hierarchical roughness for MD or selective wetting
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membrane are rather scarce.
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Inspired by the mussel adhesive protein chemistry and lotus leaf hierarchical
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structure (Figure 1 (a & b)), we presented a universal method to modify materials
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with hierarchical structures without destroying the properties of the parent material
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structure. PI (polyimide), a traditional special engineering plastic, exhibits superior
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thermal stability, high mechanical property as well as good hydrophobic
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performance.37 Significantly, the excellent chemical resistance of PI plays key roles in
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desalination or wastewater treatment.38 As a result, we rationally designed a 5
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superhydrophobic PI nanofibrous membrane (PI NFMs) via electrospinning technique,
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electrostatic attraction and low surface energy modification. The detailed procedures
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are shown in Figure 1c. The resultant interconnected porous structured membrane
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presents superhydrophobic surface with a water contact angle (WCA) of 152o and
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robust hot water resistance by simply turning the concentrations of colloidal SiO2. In
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addition, the superhydrophobic nanofibrous membrane exhibited a high water entry
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pressure of 42 kPa, which is finely fitted with the theoretical value calculating from
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Young-Laplace equation. Ultimately, the superhydrophobic membranes demonstrated
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a stable performance for treating high salinity wastewater containing typical low
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surface tension and dissolved contaminants, which would be an appropriate candidate
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for MD membrane especially for multi-component salinity wastewater purification.
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Most importantly, the green dual-bioinspired method can be used as a universal
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method for designing materials with roughness construction, demonstrating the
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potential applications in various selective separations.
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Figure 1 (a) The in situ polymerization of DA and PEI. (b) Photograph and FE-SEM 6
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images of Lotus leaf. (c) Schematic illustrating the procedures for preparation of
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superhydrophobic PI NFMs with a lotus-leaf-like structure; the photographs showing
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the large-scale PI nanofibrous membrane.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Materials. 4,4'-oxydianiline (ODA), pyromellitic dianhydride (PMDA), trimethoxy
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(heptadecafluorotetrahydrodecyl)-triethoxysilane
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(DMAc) were purchased from Aladdin Chemical Regent Company. Dopamine (DA),
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polyethyleneimine (PEI, Mw=600), methylene blue (MeB), ethanol (99 wt%), and
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sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate (SDBS) were purchased from Shanghai Runjie
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Chemical Reagent Company, China. Silica nanoparticles with an effective surface
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area of 198-250 m2/g (Ludox SM, 30 wt%) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich
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Company. Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and hydrochloric (HCl) were purchased from
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Xilong Chemical Company, China. Sodium chloride (NaCl), potassium chloride
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(KCl), magnesium chloride (MgCl2), magnesium sulfate (MgSO4), calcium sulfate
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(CaSO4) were purchased from Tianjin Benchmark Chemical Reagent Company, China.
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The crude oil and the soya-bean oil were obtained from the 5th Daqing oil Production
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Factory and Jiusan Oils & Grains Industries Group Co., Ltd, respectively. The
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lubricating oil (L-DVB) was purchased from Japan Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Co.,
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Ltd. The commercial PTFE and PVDF membrane were purchased from Haining
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Lianzhong Filter Equipment Technology Co., Ltd, and Merck Millipore, respectively.
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All chemicals were used as received without further purification.
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Preparation of PI Nanofibrous Membranes. The pristine poly (amic acid) (PAA)
(FAS),
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solution was synthesized using PMDA and ODA through polycondensation
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reaction.39 Generally, 2.7 g of PMDA and 2.7g of ODA were dissolved in 24.6 g of
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DMAc solution with continuously stirring at 0 oC for 12 h. The PAA NFMs was
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fabricated via electrospinning using the pristine PAA solution with the solid content
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of 18 wt%. Typically, 10 mL of PAA solution was loaded in a syringe at a fixed
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voltage of 15 kV and a feed rate of 0.25 mL h-1 with a work distance of 20 cm
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between tip of the needle and the collector. The fabrication chamber temperature and
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humidity were fixed at 23±1 oC and 45±3%, respectively. All the collected
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electrospun nanofibrous membranes were dried at 60 oC in a vacuum for 3 h to
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remove the residual solvent and then thermally imidized to obtain PI nanofibers
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heating up at a rate of 5 oC min-1 to 100, 200 and 300 oC at each temperature stage for
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30 min.
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Surface Modification of PI NFMs. The PI NFMs was modified with aqueous
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solution of DA (2 mg mL-1) and PEI (6 mg mL-1) in l0 mM Tris-buffer.36 The DA/PEI
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solution was stirred at room temperature for 24 h in order to perfectly cover the PI
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nanofiber with core-shell structure. The PI NFMs after PDA/PEI modification were
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rinsed thoroughly with deionized water at least three times, following dried in a
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vacuum oven at 50 °C for 6 h. The positively charged PI NFMs was then immersed in
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various concentrations of Ludox SM for 3 h in acetate buffer with an ionic strength of
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~1 mM. The pH of the suspension was adjusted to 4.5 to accelerate the electrostatic
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attraction between the positively charged PI nanofibers and the negatively charged
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SiO2 NPs. After the SiO2 NPs were successfully anchored on the PI nanofibers 8
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surface, the composite membrane was then immersed in 1 wt% of FAS in ethanol
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solution for 12 h to low the membrane surface energy. After that, the fluorinated
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SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs were subjected to heat treatment at 120 oC for 2 h.
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Characterization. The morphologies of fibers were observed by a field emission
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scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM) (Zeiss SUPRA 55 SAPPHIRE) and
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transmission electron microscopy (TEM) (JEM-2100F, JEOL Ltd). The elemental
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compositions of the membranes were investigated by Fourier transform infrared
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(FT-IR) spectra with attenuated total reflectance (ATR) (PerkinElmer Spectrum). Zeta
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potential of membranes surface were evaluated by a streaming potential analyzer
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using streaming current measurements (SurPASS, Anton Paar GmbH, Australia).
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Measurements were performed with a solution containing 1 mmol/L KCl. The
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near-surface chemical information of the materials was analyzed by X-ray
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photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS, K-Alpha, Al Kα radiation). The surface area of the
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samples was derived from N2 sorption measurements using an automatic micropore
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physisorption analyzer (Tristar 3020, USA). The pore size distribution was
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characterized via a bubble point method using a capillary flow porometer
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(CFP-1100ai, Porous Materials InC., USA). The mechanical property of relevant
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samples was performed on a tensile tester (XQ-1C, Shanghai New Fiber Instrument
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Co., Ltd., China). Water contact angles (WCAs) of 3 µL were performed using a
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contact angle goniometer (Kino SL200B). The liquid entry pressure was measured
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using a capillary flow porometer (POROLUX 1000, Germany). The surface
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roughness of single fibers were measured by atomic force microscope with a scan 9
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area of 1 µm ×1 µm (AFM, Nanoscope Ⅳ, Digital instruments).
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MD Performance Tests. The membrane performances were tested using a lab-scale
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direct contact membrane distillation (DCMD) system with an effective membrane
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area of 16 cm2 as shown in Figure S1. The feed and permeate solution were cycled
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through the flat-sheet membrane cell. The feed solutions were prepared with various
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concentrations of salinity water and operated at desired temperatures. The simulated
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reverse osmosis concentrated water was composed of 32.61 g/L of NaCl, 1.03 g/L of
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KCl, 4.52 g/L of MgCl, 2.91 g/L of MgSO4 and 1.80 g/L of CaSO4. Meanwhile, the
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temperature of cold permeate side was always fixed at 20 oC with a conductivity
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below 5 µS/cm circling by a peristaltic pump.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Figure 2 (a) Zeta potential as a function of pH of colloidal silica and PI NFMs
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modified by PDA and PDA/PEI, respectively. (b) ATR-FTIR spectra and (c-f) TEM
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images
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F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs. (h) FE-SEM and (i) AFM images of single nanofiber of
of
PI
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F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI, respectively. (j) Cross-section image of F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI
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NFMs.
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Surface Properties and Morphologies of Modified Nanofibrous Membrane. To
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obtain a superhydrophobic membrane surface for durable MD with high water flux
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and salt rejection, hierarchical roughness and surface chemistry are the two crucial
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factors in determining the anti-wetting characteristic.40,41 In the present work, SiO2
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NPs were used to decorate PI nanofibers with uniform roughness because the SiO2
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NPs with abundance hydroxyl functional groups allow surface fluorination via
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well-established silane chemistry.6,42 Electrostatic attraction has been considered as
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one of the best ways to uniform disperses SiO2 NPs onto the nanofiber surface owing
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to its ease of operation and perfect uniform dispersion. However, both the PI NFMs
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and SiO2 NPs possess negative surface charge in the pH values ranging from 3 to 11,
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which were monitored by zeta potential as shown in Figure 2a. In order to obtain the
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positively charged membrane, the PI membrane was firstly modified by in situ
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polymerization of DA/PEI to generate positive amine functional groups. The
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PDA/PEI@PI NFMs exhibited a superhydrophilic surface with a water contact angle
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of 0o, and increased the positive zeta potential of the PI NFMs with an extrapolated
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isoelectric points of~6.5 mV. Mechanism for the in situ polymerization of DA/PEI is
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well clarified in our previous study as shown in Figure 1a.36 For comparison, the PDA
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coated PI NFMs was found still to be negatively charged in the entire pH range
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because the as-prepared PI NFMs prepared from electrospinning technique was more
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negatively charged than PDA, which was not beneficial for electrostatic attraction. 11
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Fortunately, during the polymerization of DA, the catechol of DA can serve as the
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starting points to crosslink with PEI. Thus, the modified PI NFMs with positive
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charge coating (PDA/PEI) can bind the negatively charged SiO2 NPs via electrostatic
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attraction, and then graft FAS to low the surface energy of the nanofibrous
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membranes.6,42
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The surface modification of PI NFMs with PDA/PEI, SiO2 NPs and FAS were
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measured by attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR)
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spectroscopy measurement and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) as shown in
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Figure 2b and Figure S2. The formation of covalent bonds between catechol moieties
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of PDA and amines of PEI through Michael addition reaction can also remarkably
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enhance the acid resistance in the following roughness construction in acid condition
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(pH=4). FT-IR and XPS analyses for the polymerization of DA/PEI are shown in
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Figure 2b and Figure S2. After the electrostatic attraction with SiO2 NPs, a new peak
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rose at 1110 cm-1 was assigned to silanol groups of SiO2 NPs.27 In addition, the
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surface fluorination of SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs could also be confirmed by the
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enhanced absorbance intensity at 1140 cm-1, corresponding to -CF2 symmetric
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stretching mode.27
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The morphologies of single PI nanofiber and nanofibrous membrane treated at
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different stages were monitored by TEM and FE-SEM images as shown in Figure
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2(c-g) and Figure S(3 & 4). All the nanofibers oriented randomly with high aspect
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ratio, which constructed the 3-dimensional network structure. The macropores could
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be served as interconnected passageways for vapor transfer and limit water from 12
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permeation. After PDA/PEI coating, the average diameters of PDA/PEI@PI nanofiber
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was increased to 375±25 nm as shown in Figure S5, a thickness of~38 nm of
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PDA/PEI layer could be observed (Figure 2d) compared with single PI nanofiber
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(Figure 2c).
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NFMs because the interaction between catechol groups of PEI and the amino group of
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DA can effectively suppress the PDA aggregation.36 After electrostatic attraction, the
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dense SiO2 NPs are uniformly and compactly anchored on the fiber surface without
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flaws, as shown in Figure 2(e & f), which is a key factor in determining the membrane
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durability because the flaws resulting from the uneven nanoparticles on membrane
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substrate give opportunities for water permeation after long-term operation.19
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Meanwhile, the fiber diameter was sharply increased to 470±35 nm (Figure S3 & 5),
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demonstrating the SiO2 NPs with multilevel structure successfully decorated onto the
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PI fiber surface. In addition, the roughness of fiber surface was greatly increased from
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3.56 to 31.75 nm as shown in Figure 2(h & i) and Figure S6. Significantly, the
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interaction between SiO2 NPs and the fiber surface was very strong and no visible
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changes were observed regarding the fiber morphology after 1 h sonication treatments
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with a power of 150 W (Figure S7). This demonstrates the electrostatic attraction
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method between positive PDA/PEI and negative SiO2 for roughness construction
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shows robust stability. The cross-section images of PI nanofibrous membrane and
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relevant single nanofiber treated at different stages are shown in Figure 2j and Figure
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S8, revealing the nanofibers accumulated layer by layer constructed the
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interconnected porous structures. The treated membrane also exhibited denser than the
Most importantly, the PDA/PEI layer was uniformly coated on the PI
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as-prepared PI nanofibrous membrane due to the crosslinking of fibers as shown in
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Figure S3b. The membrane surface with and without SiO2 NPs after fluorination did
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not affect the surface morphologies and fiber diameters as shown in Figure S(3d & 4).
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Furthermore, the average thickness of PI, PDA/PEI@PI, SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI and
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F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs are 81±3, 91±2, 102±3 and 105±4 µm, respectively,
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which was due to the increased thickness of the bottom and top layer after PDA/PEI
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coating and SiO2 NPs decoration. The increased thickness was also in accordance
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with the diameter changes.
273 274
Figure 3 (a) N2 ad/desorption, pore size distribution and (c) stress-strain curves of PI,
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PDA/PEI@PI, SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI and F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs, respectively.
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Membrane Specific Surface Area, Pore Size Distribution and Mechanical
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Strength Analyses. The unique introduction of SiO2 NPs created the pristine PI fiber
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surface with hierarchical roughness, thus dramatically increased the effective surface
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area. Therefore, N2 ad/desorption isotherms as shown in Figure 3a reveal a typical-IV
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isotherms, indicating the presence of open mesopores and macrospores.43 The
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mesopores and macrospores are mainly coming from the SiO2 NPs with mesopores in
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nature and the stacking of PI nanofibers. The surface area of the as-prepared PI,
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PDA/PEI@PI, SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI and F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs are 7.32, 6.18,
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27.30 and 25.22 m2 g-1, respectively, demonstrating the major contribution role of 14
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SiO2 NPs in determing the specific surface area and roughness structure, which was in
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aggrement with the FE-SEM image results (Figure S3). Figure 3b gives typical pore
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size distributions of PI, PDA/PEI@PI, SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI and F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI
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NFMs measured through a bubble point method using a capillary flow porometer. It is
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worth noting that the pore size distribution of all the relevant membranes was shown
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in the range from 1.5 to 4 µm, and the average pore size gradually decreased from
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2.65 to 2.23 µm. The decrease in pore size distribution of PI NFMs could be attributed
292
to that the layer by layer modification gradually narrowed the average pore size
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distributions. The mechanical strength of relevant nanofibrous membranes was also
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measured as shown in Figure 3c. Before broken, all the samples exhibited a nonlinear
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elastic deformation in the first region (0 to 25%) under a stress load, and then the
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stress-strain curves displayed a quasi linear plastic behavior until breakage.
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Interestingly, the mehanical strength and the tensile strain were increased to 321±22
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cN and 50.48 %, respectively. The PDA/PEI used as the positively charged adhesive
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have the functionality to adhere the fiber points, which slightly enhanced the
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mechanical strength and tensile strain. After the roughness construction and
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fluorination, the stress was slightly decreasd to 290±16 and 277±21 cN, which could
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be attributed to that the hydrophilic SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs displays slight
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swelling.36
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Figure 4 (a) WCAs of modified F-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs with various concentrations
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of SiO2 NPs. (b) WCAs of the water droplet with increasing time on PI based
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nanofibrous membrane surface, respectively; the inserts showing the optical profiles
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of the evaporation of water droplets. (c) WCAs of different water quality on relevant
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PI based nanofibrous membrane surface. (d) In-air sessile drop CAs for two different
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surfaces with five liquids. (e) photographic images of different liquid droplets on the
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commercial PVDF microporous membrane and F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs. (f) The
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proposed mechanism of waterproof property based on Yong-Laplace equation and a
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plausible mechanism of vapor permeation across the porous membrane.
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Wetting Resistance of Superhydrophobic Membrane Surface. According to the
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Wenzel and Cassie models, a rough surface is essential for enhancing the surface from
316
hydrophobic to superhydrophobic and hydrophilic to superhydrophlic depending on
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the nature of the corresponding flat surface.44,45 The roughness can be improved by
318
texturing with multiple scaled roughnesses to improve the wettability. Colloidal
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assemblies of inorganic nanoparticles via van der Waals interactions have been widely
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used to create hierarchical rough structures owing to its low cost and no expensive
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lithographic technique.6,27 PDA/PEI@PI NFMs modified with various concentrations 16
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of colloidal SiO2 NPs through elecronic attraction are presented in Figure S9. It is
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clearly shown that the morphology of the resultant membranes was significantly
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changed after being created with nano-scaled roughness structures on the nanofiber
325
surface. All the SiO2 NPs are facilely positioned without obvious agglomeration, and
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a negligible amount of SiO2 NPs is present among the voids of nanofibers as the
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concentration of colloidal SiO2 NPs was increased from 0.02 to 0.2 wt% (Figure
328
S9(a-d)). However, an obvious adhesion structure was appeared and the nanoparticles
329
can large area fill the pores when the concentration of colloidal SiO2 NPs was
330
increased over 0.5 wt% as shown the inserts of Figure S9(e & f). It is reasoned that
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the increased concentration of colloidal SiO2 NPs resulted in higher viscosity can
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block the membrane pores and greatly affect the roughness of nanofibers.
333
The surface wettability of relevant SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs after fluorination
334
were measured by static water contact angels as shown in Figure 4a, the WCAs of
335
F-SiO2-PDA/
[email protected],
336
F-SiO2-PDA/
[email protected] are 133°, 138°, 145° and 152°, respectively, indicating a
337
noteworthy raising WCAs accompanied with increasing concentration of colloidal
338
SiO2 NPs. However, further increases the concentration of colloidal SiO2 NP to 0.5
339
and 1.0 wt% have decreased the WCAs to around 147° and 145°, respectively. This
340
phenomenon was due to the filling of voids among the nanofibers that reduced the
341
roughness of the membranes. As a result, F-SiO2-PDA/
[email protected] NFMs was
342
chosen as the optimal candidate for further study. In order to better understand the
343
water dynamic behavior of the composite membrane, a high-speed camera system was
344
used to examine the water droplet adhesion ability. As shown in Figure S10, a water
345
droplet of 3 µL was forced to contact the membrane surface; the droplet can easily
346
leave the membrane surface and remained its spherical shape without obvious
F-SiO2-PDA/
[email protected],
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F-SiO2-PDA/
[email protected],
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deformation even at high load pressure, demonstrating the low water adhesion
348
surface.
349
Contact angles of evaporating water droplets (3 µL) on the as-prepared and
350
modified PI NFMs were measured to evaluate the water resistance for durability, as
351
shown in Figure 4b. In the case of PI and F-PDA/PEI membranes, the WCAs
352
decreased rapidly to 65o and 84o at the end of evaporation as time increased to 30 min,
353
illustrating the incursion of water into the voids of the nanofibrous membranes.
354
Alternatively, the WCAs of superhydrophobic F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs exhibited
355
few signs of sliding with evaporation, which was in support of the Cassie–Baxter
356
model and revealed the hierarchical roughness surface can low the pinning of the
357
water droplet.46 The detailed optical profiles of water droplets evaporation state on
358
different membranes are shown in the insert in Figure 4b. The WCAs can remain high
359
and the droplet maintain its spherical shape during evaporation. In addition, the
360
membranes were measured to evaluate their resistance to a wide range of surface
361
tension and water quality including NaCl, MeB, SDBS, HCl and NaOH solutions, the
362
as-prepared PI and F-PDA/PEI@PI membrane had water contact angles over 100o,
363
indicating the initially hydrophobicity of PI matrix. The resultant fluorinated
364
membrane coated with SiO2 NPs have high WCAs toward various liquids compared
365
to those with no SiO2 NPs decoration (Figure 4c), demonstrating the air-gaps in the
366
pores have strongly liquid repulsive according to the Cassie theory. Comparing the
367
wetting properties between the commercial PVDF microporous membrane with
368
hydrophobicity and the F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs with omniphobicity as shown in
369
Figure 4 (d & e), the commercial PVDF microporous membrane was resistance to
370
wetting by the high-surface-tension liquids but easily wetted by low-surface-tension
371
liquids. The F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs exhibiting robust resistance to all the liquids 18
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demonstrates the excellent antifouling performance.
373
The MD membrane also should possess robust waterproof performance to prevent
374
the membrane from wetting and permeation by salinity water. The mechanism of
375
waterproof membrane are based on two criteria as shown in Figure 4f: (1) the surface
376
of membrane should be hydrophobic; (2) the maximum pore size of membrane should
377
be less than the average pore size of water droplet (<100 µm), which can effective
378
resist the water droplet permeation. Here, the waterproof performance of the
379
F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs was tested by hydrostatic pressure, which was associated
380
with the liquid surface tension (γliquid), liquid contact angle on the membrane surface
381
(θadv) and shape of membrane pores according to Laplace-Young equation as follows:
382
47
383
Hydrostatic pressure=−
384
Here, the γwater =72.58 mN/m, θadv =152o, dmax =2.3 µm, the calculated Hydrostatic
385
pressure was 45.3 kPa, which is finely matched well with the measured hydrostatic
386
pressure of 42 kPa. The results demonstrated that the hydrostatic pressure was
387
strongly related to the surface wettability and the maximum pore size of membrane.
388
The ideal MD membrane not only requires good waterproofness, but also equips with
389
fast vapor transmission rate. The electrospun nanofibrous membrane provides a
390
3-dimensional network with interconnected porous structure, which possesses a robust
391
property of water vapor permeation without any barriers. As shown in Figure 4f, the
392
breathable property of the superhydrophobic nanofibrous membrane was driven by
393
the temperatures gradient between the two sides. The water droplet vaporized into
394
water molecules, following permeate through the hydrophobic porous membranes and
ସఊ౭౪౨ .௦ఏౚ౬ ௗౣ౮
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be collected or condensed by pure water in the cold side (Figure 4f). In addition, the
396
distillation membrane was often operated at hot salinity water (>60 oC), thus the
397
membrane should have the ability to resistance the hot water. The hot water repellent
398
characteristic of the as-prepared PI, F-PDA/PEI@PI and F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NMFs
399
are displayed in Figure S11, it is clearly shown that both the PI and F-PDA/PEI@PI
400
NFMs exhibited obvious wetting behavior as dotted in red, demonstrating the
401
destruction of the smooth fiber surface. Interestingly, the F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs
402
still exhibited robust hydrophobicity toward hot water with no obvious wetting and
403
the hot droplets can easily slip on the membrane surface, implying the roughness
404
constructed by SiO2 NPs significantly enhanced the thermal stability of
405
F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs.
406 407
Figure 5 (a) Operation temperatures, (b) concentrations of salts, (c) salinity water
408
with different kinds of contaminants on the effect of membrane distillation. (d) 20
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Durability of the superhydrophobic F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs and the commercial
410
hydrophobic PTFE membrane in a simulated sea water containing 3.5 wt% of NaCl.
411
Membrane Performances in DCMD. The as-prepared PI NFMs treated at different
412
stages and commercial hydrophobic PTFE with different pore sizes and PVDF
413
microporous membranes were systematically evaluated using a lab–scale DCMD
414
device as shown in Figure S1. The hot feed side and cold side temperatures were fixed
415
at 60oC and 20 oC, respectively. It is observed that the flux of as-prepared PI NFMs
416
was dramatically decreased from 27.02 to 8.12 L m-2 h-1 in 180 min and the
417
F-PDA/PEI@PI membrane was decreased from 30.15 to 6.91 L m-2 h-1 in 240 min
418
(Figure
419
comparatively stable performance than the as-prepared PI NFMs in short time.
420
Subsequently, the water flux was sharply decreased and the conductivity was
421
substantially increased, revealing the membranes without roughness construction
422
show no resistance to hot water and the feed side salinity water can easily permeate
423
across the membrane. The results are in accordance with the above experiment that
424
dumping hot water onto the membrane surface aiming at measuring the hot water
425
resistance (Figure S11). Significantly, the F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs exhibited a
426
stable MD performance with a high water flux of 31.29 L m-2 h-1 and salt rejection of
427
~100% as presented in Figure S12(a & b). Both the water contact angles and
428
membrane distillation performance of modified nanofibrous membrane was higher
429
than that of traditional commercial hydrophobic PTFE membranes with different pore
430
sizes as shown in Figure S(13 & 14).
S12a),
demonstrating
the
F-PDA/PEI@PI
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membrane
exhibited
a
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As the membrane distillation is a non-isothermal separation process, the
432
temperature gradient has tremendous effect on the permeate flux.48,49 All the
433
membranes were performed over a period of 8 h using 3 wt% of NaCl solution. The
434
feed temperature was increased ranging from 40 to 90 oC and the collected side water
435
temperature was always fixed at 20 oC. Figure 5a demonstrates the water flux was
436
significantly increased from 14.23 to 63.25 L m-2 h-1 as the feed temperature was
437
increased from 40 to 90 oC, illustrating the increasing feed temperature can effectively
438
improve the vapor driving force. Fortunately, the membrane operated at high
439
temperature (90 oC) also exhibited excellent salt rejection due to the durable hot water
440
repellent characteristic as demonstrated in Figure S11. The permeate flux of
441
F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs operated at 3.0 wt% of NaCl solution and the hot side
442
temperature fixed at 60 oC is about 31.02 L m-2 h-1, which is slightly lower than that of
443
deionized water of 34.49 L m-2 h-1 (Figure 5b). Moreover, it was found that the water
444
flux was regularly decreased as increasing the NaCl concentrations, suggesting that
445
the hydration of ion and ionic association in salt solution reduced the water activity
446
and resulted in the decline of vapor pressure.
447
In addition, we also evaluated the MD performance using feed salinity water
448
solutions containing typical organic pollutant (MeB, lubricating oil, and
449
representative surfactant SDBS). It is well known that organic pollutants are often
450
presented in high salinity wastewater; therefore, the distillation membrane also should
451
have the ability to isolate the organic pollutants preventing the clean water from
452
pollution. Unfortunately, after the oil was added in the saline water, the water flux of 22
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commercial macroporous PVDF membrane (Millipore, 0.45 µm) was continuously
454
decreased and salt rejection was substantially increased, suggesting that the
455
commercial PVDF membrane is prone to wetting by the low surface tension feed
456
waters. Our resultant F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs exhibited a stable separation and
457
purification performance for treatment of polluted salinity wastewater containing
458
typical low surface tension and dissolved contaminants as displayed in Figure 5c. We
459
attribute this fascinating result to the multilayer structured membrane and low surface
460
energy of F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs with omniphobicity. Meanwhile, the simulated
461
RO concentrated water was also performed under the same condition, the membrane
462
also showed a stable water flux and high salt rejection. Significantly, the
463
superhydrophobic F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs shows a water contact angle of 152o,
464
which exhibited disadvantage compared to previous electrospun nanofibrous
465
membranes employed in MD.50-52 However, it is worth noting that the above
466
mentioned electrospun MD membranes show comparatively high contact angles, but
467
the running time of membrane distillation is generally less than 12 h. We inferred that
468
traditional coating or co-electrospinning methods are inevitably faced the
469
inhomogeneity of roughness on membrane substrate because the coated inorganic
470
nanoparticles are not uniformly and compactly covered the membrane surface. The
471
flaws may become the beginning of the membrane wetting after long-time operation.
472
The superhydrophobic F-SiO2-PDA/PEI@PI NFMs membrane can maintain robust
473
durability and stability after 48 h operation, which have obvious advantages compared
474
with the above mentioned electrospun nanofibrous membranes and commercial PTFE 23
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475
microporous membrane (Figure 5d). Therefore, the compactness and uniformity of
476
inorganic particles on the membrane substrate play key roles in determining the
477
durability of MD membrane, reducing the formation of defects and the wetting of
478
membrane.
479 480
Figure 6 (a-e) FE-SEM images of porous materials after hierarchical structure
481
construction. (f) The water contact angles of hierarchical structured porous materials
482
before and after fluorination.
483
A Simple and Universal Procedure for Fabricating Hierarchical Structured
484
Materials with Superhydrophobicity or Superhydrophilicity. To prove the
485
universality of this method, various materials including copper mesh, steel mesh,
486
silica fiber, hydrate membrane and cellulose triacetate membrane were used to
487
construct the raw materials with hierarchical structures. The raw materials before and
488
after roughness construction are shown in Figure S15 and Figure 6, all the materials 24
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whether the inorganic, metal or polymer materials can be successfully constructed
490
with roughness. Significantly, all the materials after SiO2 NPs construction exhibited
491
robust superhydrophlic surface with water contact angles of 0o. After fluorination, the
492
surface properties of materials were greatly turned from superhydrophlicity to
493
superhydrophobicity as shown in Figure 6f, demonstrating the dual-bioinspired design
494
can be used as a universal method and paved a new method for constructing
495
membranes surface with superhydrophobicity or superhydrophilicity for various
496
applications.
497
In summary, we have successfully demonstrated a facile and scalable method for
498
fabrication of superhydrophobic nanofibrous membrane with enhanced hot water
499
resistance via electrospinning, dual-bioinspired design and fluorination. The in situ
500
polymerized PDA/PEI layer endowed the as-prepared PI NFMs with strong positively
501
charged coating, which enable irreversible bind the negatively charged SiO2 NPs onto
502
the nanofiber surface through electrostatic attraction. After fluorination, the resultant
503
nanofibrous membrane displayed promising superhydrophobicity with a WCA of 152o
504
and displayed robust resistance to hot water (85 oC). In addition, the relationship
505
among hydrophobicity, hydrostatic pressure and maximum pore size were proved to
506
be finely accordance with the Young-Laplace equation. Significantly, the
507
superhydrophobic nanofibrous membrane exhibited a stable performance for treating
508
high salinity wastewater, in which contained typical low surface tension and dissolved
509
contaminants.
510
environmental benign synthesis and would pave the way for new types of hierarchical
The
dual-bioinspired
construction
method
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may
provide
an
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structured materials for various applications such as waterproof and breathable fabrics,
512
oil water separation and anti-pollution paint etc.
513 514
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
515
Supporting information
516
The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications
517
website at DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.XXX.
518
AUTHOR INFORMATION
519 520 521 522
Corresponding Author E-mail:
[email protected] 523
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
Notes
524 525
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
526
The authors gratefully acknowledge National Natural Science Foundation of China
527
(Grant no. 51573034), State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and
528
Environment in HIT of China (No. 2016DX02), HIT Environment and Ecology
529
Innovation Special Funds (No. HSCJ201606), Postdoctoral Science Foundation of
530
Heilongjiang Prov. (LBH-TZ0606 and LBH-Q16012). Scientific Research Foundation
531
for Returned Scholars, Heilongjiang of China (LC2017023). The authors also
532
gratefully acknowledge acknowledge Dr. Zheyu Li for useful discussions and
533
technical support.
534
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51. Li, X., García-Payo, M.C., Khayet, M. Wang, M., Wang, X. Superhydrophobic polysulfone/polydimethylsiloxane electrospun nanofibrous membranes for water desalination by direct contact membrane distillation. J. Membr. Sci, 2017, 542, 308-319. 52. Shahabadi, S. M. S., Rabiee, H., Seyedi, S. M., Mokhtare, A., Brant, J. A. Superhydrophobic dual layer functionalized titanium dioxide/polyvinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene (TiO2/PH) nanofibrous membrane for high flux membrane distillation. J. Membr. Sci, 2017, 537, 140-150.
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