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Article
Organic Fouling of Graphene Oxide Membranes and Its Implications for Membrane Fouling Control in Engineered Osmosis Meng Hu, Sunxiang Zheng, and Baoxia Mi Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b03916 • Publication Date (Web): 21 Dec 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 23, 2015
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MANUSCRIPT
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Organic Fouling of Graphene Oxide Membranes and Its Implications for Membrane Fouling Control in Engineered Osmosis
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Submitted to
Environmental Science & Technology
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Revision submitted on October 30, 2015
Meng Hu 1, Sunxiang Zheng 2, and Baoxia Mi 2*
*
1
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Maryland College Park, MD 20742, USA
2
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of California Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. +1-510-643-5264
e-mail:
[email protected]; tel.: +1-510-664-7446; Fax:
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Abstract
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This study provides experimental evidence to mechanistically understand some contradicting
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effects of the characteristic properties of graphene oxide (GO), such as the high hydrophilicity,
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negative charge, strong adsorption capability, and large surface area, on the antifouling properties
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of GO membranes.
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GO barrier layer on the back (i.e., porous) side of an asymmetric membrane for fouling control
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in pressure retarded osmosis (PRO), an emerging engineered osmosis process that can be
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advantageously exploited to extract the sustainable osmotic energy yet its advancement has been
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much hindered due to the severe irreversible fouling that occurs as foulants accumulate inside the
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porous membrane support.
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operated in forward osmosis mode, the GO membrane exhibited fouling performance
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comparable with that of a polyamide (PA) membrane. Analysis of the membrane adsorption
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capacity showed that, likely due to the presence of hydrophobic regions in the GO basal plane,
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the GO membrane has an affinity towards organic foulants 4 to 5 times higher than the PA
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membrane.
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noticeably aggravate the fouling problem.
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foulants are adsorbed mainly on the basal plane of GO nanosheets while water enters the GO
52
membrane primarily around the oxidized edges of GO, making foulant adsorption not create
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much hindrance to water flux. When operated in PRO mode, the GO membrane exhibited
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much better antifouling performance than the PA membrane.
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membrane for which foulants can be easily trapped inside the porous support and hence incur
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severe irreversible fouling, the GO membrane causes the foulants to accumulate primarily on its
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surface due to the sealing effect of the GO layer assembled on the porous side of the asymmetric
Furthermore, this study demonstrates the effectiveness of forming a dense
Protein and alginate were used as model organic foulants.
When
Such a high adsorption capacity along with a large surface area, however, did not Our explanation for this phenomenon is that organic
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This is because unlike the PA
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membrane support.
Results from physical cleaning experiments further showed that the water
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flux of GO membranes operated in PRO mode can be sufficiently restored towards its initial pre-
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fouling level.
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Introduction
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Graphene oxide (GO), a single-layer carbon sheet that has a unique two-dimensional (2D) shape
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and carries abundant oxygenated functional groups, holds great promise as a very useful
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antifouling material due to its high hydrophilicity, charge properties, and antimicrobial
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properties.1-6
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thus weaken the adhesion forces between organic foulants and membrane surfaces.7 Besides, by
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introducing more negative charges to a membrane, GO creates electrostatic repulsion against
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microorganism deposition and thus inhibit membrane biofouling.8
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properties, GO can generate the oxidative stress by producing reactive oxygen species, create the
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membrane stress via the direct contact with sharp nanosheets during the initial cell deposition on
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GO, and enable the cell wrapping that reduces the metabolic activities and eventually kills
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bacterial cells.9-13 Taking advantages of these antibacterial properties, polyamide (PA)
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membranes can be grafted with GO for biofouling control.14
For example, GO is able to effectively enhance the membrane hydrophilicity and
Regarding its antimicrobial
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Despite the above fruitful research on the use of GO to control membrane fouling, a
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fundamental question remains to be answered: Do the characteristic properties of GO, especially
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the strong adsorption capability towards organic molecules
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(around 2630 m2/g),17 adversely affect the antifouling properties of GO membranes?
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a strong adsorption capacity along with a large surface area would tend to attract more foulants
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to the membrane. If the absorbed foulants do block the water channels within a GO membrane,
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the fouling problem can be aggravated.
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individual and overall effects of the different properties (e.g., the hydrophilicity and adsorption)
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of GO on membrane fouling will offer key information for the development of highly fouling-
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resistant GO membranes.
15, 16
and the large surface area Intuitively,
Therefore, a fundamental understanding of both
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In most of the GO-related membrane fouling studies, GO has been blended into the
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polymer matrix to form various nanocomposite membranes, including polyvinylidene fluoride
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(PVDF) microfiltration,2 PVDF ultrafiltation,1,
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nanofiltration membranes.18
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GO is not directly exposed to foulants, thereby making the interactions between GO and foulants
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very limited.
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for membrane fouling control, have unfortunately not been fully exploited.
3
polysulfone,8 and polyether sulfone
One of the major disadvantages of the embedding approach is that
As a result, many of the excellent GO properties, which can be especially useful
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A more effective GO-based fouling control approach is to deposit GO nanosheets
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directly on the membrane surface so that the interactions between GO and foulants can be
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maximized.
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conveniently interact with foulants.
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modified by grafting GO
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interactions 19 to enhance the membrane fouling resistance to bacteria and bovine serum albumin
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(BSA). However, these studies mainly focus on the biocidal effect of GO.
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research is needed to mechanically identify the physicochemical properties of GO that most
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significantly contribute to the membrane fouling resistance and investigate their overall effects
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on membrane antifouling performance.
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The unique 2D structure of GO offers a significantly large contact area for GO to
14
For this reason, the surface of a PA membrane can be
or by stacking GO and amine-functionalized GO via electrostatic
Clearly, more
To our best knowledge, the potential benefit of the unique 2D shape of GO has not been
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explicitly exploited in the literature to control membrane fouling.
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it extremely convenient to assemble a thin film on practically any surface20, 21, including the
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rough surface of the more porous (i.e., back) side of an asymmetric membrane.
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convenience can be very useful for mitigating fouling that occurs on the back side of an
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asymmetric membrane used in a pressure retarded osmosis (PRO) process.
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The 2D shape of GO makes
Such
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PRO is a membrane process that uses the osmotic pressure difference between two
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streams as a driving force to create water flow from the low concentration stream to the high
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concentration stream through a semipermeable membrane, and the water flow can drive a
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mechanical turbine to generate electricity.22-25 PRO has been proposed to harvest the natural
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salinity energy from the mixing of river water and high-salinity water,26-28 hence a new
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renewable energy source becomes available to help meet the grand energy challenges.29-31
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One of the bottleneck technical problems that have severely impeded the advancement
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of the promising PRO technology is the membrane fouling, which occurs as foulants enter the
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porous support layer on the back side (facing the feed solution) of a typically asymmetric,
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semipermeable membrane and accumulate inside the pore structure of the membrane.26,
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Control of such fouling poses a significant challenge.
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membranes used in PRO mode all have relatively large pores and rough surfaces on the back side.
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Such a structure is highly susceptible to foulant trapping.
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increases, water flux declines, and fouling enhanced concentration polarization occurs,
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eventually lowering the power generation efficiency of a PRO system.26, 32-37
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This is because the currently available
As a result, the transport resistance
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Cleaning of membrane fouling in PRO is another formidable task because foulants are
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trapped inside the support layer.26 Note that for membranes operated in forward osmosis (FO)
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mode, the back porous side of the support faces the draw solution.
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almost entirely on membrane front dense surface only and can be nearly completely removed
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using simple physical cleaning (by increasing the cross-flow velocity),38
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because membranes in PRO suffer from irreversible fouling, physical cleaning (or even chemical
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cleaning) is not very effective due to the shielding effects of support layer.26
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backwash effort (by switching the feed and draw solutions) can at best recover ~60% water flux
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As a result, fouling occurs
In comparison,
Even an osmotic
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or equivalently ~44% project power density.26
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An intuitive and also most effective way to control membrane fouling in PRO mode is to
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create an antifouling “barrier” layer on the back side of the asymmetric membrane such that the
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entry of foulants to the support layer can be blocked while water and desired ions/molecules can
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still pass through the barrier.39, 40
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such as phase inversion and interfacial polymerization, pose huge technical challenges to
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creating such a dense layer on the back side.
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membrane support using soft polymers (e.g., hyperbranched polyglycerol) to alleviate fouling in
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PRO.40 However, it is nearly impossible for the large pores (with sizes ranging from hundreds of
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nm to a few micrometer) on the back side of the membrane to be fully covered with soft
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polymers using any currently available surface modification technique.
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modification approach is not sufficient to satisfactorily prevent the accumulation of foulants
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inside the porous support, thereby causing severe long-term fouling concerns.
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However, the traditional membrane synthesis approaches,
So far, researchers have attempted to modify the
Therefore, the surface
The present study aims at thoroughly understanding the role of GO in controlling the
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organic fouling of membranes.
The GO membrane was prepared by the layer-by-layer (LbL)
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assembly of GO nanosheets and cationic polyelectrolyte on both the front (i.e., dense) and back
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(i.e., coarse pored) sides of a membrane support.
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GO membrane and a control PA membrane was systematically tested in FO and PRO modes,
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respectively.
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fouling in PRO mode by assembling a dense GO barrier layer on the back side of the porous
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support are emphasized.
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characterize the membrane-foulant interactions in order to fundamentally explain the membrane
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fouling mechanisms.
The fouling and cleaning behavior of both the
In particular, the salient advantages of using GO to effectively control membrane
Quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) was used to
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Materials and Methods
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Chemicals and Materials
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All chemicals were used as received from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO) unless noted otherwise.
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The following chemicals were used for membrane synthesis: polyacrylonitril (PAN) (Mw ≈
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150,000 kDa), N,N-Dimethylformamide (DMF), sodium hydroxide (NaOH), poly(allylamine
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hydrochloride) (PAH), polysulfone (PSf) pellets (Udel P3500, Solvay Specialty Polymers USA,
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Douglasville, GA), 1-methyl-2pyrrolidinone (NMP), 1,3,5-benzenetricarbonyl trichloride (TMC),
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1,3-phenylenediamine (MPD), and Isopar-G (Univar, Redmond, WA). Sucrose was used as draw
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solutes in the fouling experiments. Sodium alginate (Mw 12–80 kDa) and BSA (lyophilized
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powder, Mw ~ 66 kDa) were selected as model organic foulants in the study.
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were prepared by dissolving 10 g/L of each type of foulant in deionized (DI) water and then
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stored in sterilized bottles at 4 °C.
Stock solutions
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Preparation of GO and PA Membranes
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GO was prepared by the modified Hummer’s method as described in our previous studies.21, 41
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The prepared GO has a carbon-to-oxygen ratio of about 2.21 The GO membrane was synthesized
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by the LbL assembly of GO and PAH.41
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a membrane support.42 First, a hand-cast PAN membrane was hydrolyzed in 1.5 M NaOH
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solution for 90 min to make a hydrolyzed PAN (hPAN) support.
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alternately soaked in 1 g/L PAH and 0.5 g/L GO solutions (both at pH~4) for five times to
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assemble a five GO-PAH double-layer film on both sides of the hPAN support.
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study showed that GO-PAH membranes with two to ten double layers demonstrate similar
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performance in forward osmosis,41 but we chose to synthesize five double-layer membrane in
LbL is an effective approach to create dense layers on
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Then, the hPAN support was
Our previous
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this study as a conservative minimum in order to minimize potential membrane imperfections
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due to fewer cycles of LbL assembly.
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The PA membrane was prepared by interfacial polymerization.43, 44
Briefly speaking, a
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PSf membrane support was prepared by casting a PSf film (12 wt% dissolved in NMP) onto a
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polyester nonwoven fabric (PET, grade 3249, Ahlstrom, Helsinki, Finland), which was then
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immediately transferred into a 3 wt% NMP/DI coagulation bath to allow complete phase
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separation.
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by interfacial polymerization between a MPD solution (3.4 wt% in DI) and a TMC solution (0.15
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wt% in Isopar-G).
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NaOCl aqueous solution, and NaHSO3 aqueous solution.
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can be found in the SI.
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DI water and stored in 4 °C ready for testing and characterization.
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Membrane Performance Tests
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The membrane performance was tested in a custom-built FO cross-flow membrane system as
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described in our previous study.45 The system consists of a membrane cell with an effective
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membrane area of 20 cm2, two magnetic pumps (Cole-Parmer, Vernon Hills, IL) that circulate
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the feed and draw solutions through the membrane cell from their respective reservoirs, a water
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bath (NESLAB RTE 10, Thermo Scientific, Newington, NH) that keeps the system temperature
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at 25 °C throughout an experiment, a digital balance that sends the weight of the draw solution to
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a personal computer for recording every 5 min, and a stir plate that constantly mixes the feed
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solution.
The prepared PSf membrane was then used as support to prepare the PA membrane
The PA membrane was subsequently post-treated using hot water, 200 ppm A more detailed synthesis procedure
The synthesized GO and PA membranes were thoroughly rinsed with
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The water permeability coefficient A and solute permeability coefficient B of the
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membrane active layer and the structural parameter S of the membrane support layer were
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characterized using an available protocol 46 described as follows.
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characterization experiment consists of four stages, for which the sucrose concentration of the
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draw solution was increased incrementally from 200 to 900 mM.
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draw solution was monitored to calculate the water flux Jw and the concentration of sucrose in
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the feed solution was measured by the total organic carbon (TOC) to calculate the solute flux Js
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using the following equations:46
Conducted in FO mode, each
The weight change of the
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Jw =
∆m ρAm ∆t
(1)
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Js =
C (V0 − J w Am ∆t ) − C 0V0 Am ∆t
(2)
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where ∆m is the weight change of the draw solution at a given time period ∆t, ρ is the density of
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water, Am is the effective membrane area, C0 and C are the sucrose concentrations before and
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after time ∆t, respectively, and V0 and V are the volumes of the feed solution before and after
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time ∆t, respectively.
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following transport governing equations were fitted with Jw, Js, and the corresponding solution
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concentration and osmotic pressure of both the feed and draw solutions.46
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To obtain the membrane transport/structural parameters A, B, and S, the
= =
(3)
(4)
( )
( )
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where CD and CF are the concentrations of the draw and feed solutions, respectively, πD and πF
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are the osmotic pressures of the draw and feed solutions, respectively, D is the bulk diffusion
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coefficient of sucrose (4.8 × 10-10 m2/s),47 and k is the external mass transfer coefficient, which
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approaches infinity when the external concentration polarization is negligible.46
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In order to characterize the membrane fouling, fouling experiments were performed with
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200 mg/L foulant and 50 mM NaCl in the feed solution, and an initial water flux of ~4 µm/s,
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which was achieved by adjusting the sucrose concentration in the draw solution.
The feed and
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draw solutions flowed concurrently at a cross-flow velocity of 11 cm/s.
The fouling
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experiments were started with 2 L feed and 2 L draw solutions and stopped when the cumulative
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volume of water that permeated from feed to draw solution reached ~400 mL (after 16 to 20 h
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depending on membranes).
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water through the system concurrently for 15 min at a cross-flow velocity of 21 cm/s, after which
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the water flux was measured again to determine the flux recovery.
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tests, the same draw solution was used to yield the initial water flux of 4 µm/s, and the same feed
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solution was used but without the adding of foulants. Baseline experiments were performed
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under the same operating conditions as in the fouling experiments except that foulants were not
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added in the feed solution so that
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flux decline in fouling experiments was corrected using the baseline flux profile.
Physical cleaning was then immediately performed by flushing DI
To perform the cleaning
the flux drop due to dilution effects was accounted for. The
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Characterization of Membrane Surface Properties
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QCM-D (E-4, Biolin Scientific, Linthicum Heights, MD) was used to quantify the LbL assembly
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of GO membrane (Figure S1), charge density, and foulants adsorption onto a membrane.
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order to perform the QCM-D measurement, GO and PA membranes were coated, respectively,
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onto a gold sensor (Biolin Scientific, Linthicum Heights, MD).
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( ~ 0.2 mL) of MPD solution (3.4 wt% in DI) was spread on a thoroughly cleaned gold sensor,
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the extra solution was absorbed with a Kimwipe along the edge of the sensor, and then a drop of
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TMC solution (0.15 wt% in Isopar-G) was pipetted onto the MPD-treated sensor to form a PA
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In
For the PA coating, one drop
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layer on the sensor. Both the GO and PA-coated sensors were then exposed to a series of 1 mM
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CsCl solutions at pH of 4, 7, and10, respectively, to quantify the charge density.48
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the CsCl solution was adjusted with 1 mM CsOH solution.
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rinsed with DI water, a fouling solution containing 200 mg/L foulant (BSA or alginate) and 50
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mM NaCl, was pumped through the QCM-D module to measure the adsorption of foulants onto
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the membrane surface. The changes in frequency f and dissipation D were recorded upon the
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introducing of the foulants and were modeled with a viscoelastic representation to obtain the
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mass of foulants adsorbed onto the GO and PA-coated sensors, respectively.
The pH of
After the sensor was thoroughly
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To compare the surface hydrophilicity of the GO and PA membranes, a sessile drop
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method was used to measure the water contact angle using a Kruss goniometer (G10, Kruss USA,
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Charlotte, NC). To determine the location of fouling occurrence, the clean and fouled (in PRO
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mode) PA and GO membranes were characterized using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR)
256
spectroscopy (Nicolet 6700, Thermo Scientific, Marietta, OH).
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Results and Discussion
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Comparison of GO and PA membrane properties
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Figure 1 illustrates the major structural differences between the GO and PA membranes.
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the GO membrane was synthesized by coating five GO-PAH double layers on both front and
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back sides of a porous hPAN support, both surfaces of the GO membrane exhibit a relatively
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rough but non-porous surface morphology (Figure 1(a)).
264
study,41 the thickness of a 5 double-layer GO membrane was ~80 nm, and the equivalent
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molecular size cutoff was around 1 nm.41 In comparison, the synthesized PA membrane has a
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typical asymmetric structure, with a rough, dense PA layer on the front side and a porous surface
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Since
As characterized in our previous
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on the back side (Figure 1(b)).
The double-sided coating enables the GO membrane to have
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some unique transport and antifouling properties, as discussed subsequently.
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Figure 1
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In order to compare the transport properties of GO and PA membranes, water and solute
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fluxes were measured experimentally using sucrose as the draw solute, and then they were
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modeled to obtain water and solute transport parameters A and B as well as membrane structural
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parameter S for both membranes.
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higher water flux and a lower solute flux than the PA membrane.
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the GO and PA membranes have similar solute permeability coefficient B, while the GO
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membrane has a much higher water permeability coefficient A, indicating a much lower
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permeation resistance to water.
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parameter S than the PA membrane, most likely due to the longer diffusion distance generated by
279
the double-sided coating on the support of the GO membrane.49 It should be noted that coating a
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GO layer on the back side of a support could also help mitigate the internal concentration
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polarization (ICP) of an FO membrane. This is because GO may serve as an additional selective
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layer that prevents the draw solutes from moving into the porous support.50
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As shown in Figure 2(a-b), the GO membrane demonstrates a As summarized in Figure 2(c),
In the meantime the GO membrane has a higher structural
Figure 2
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Membrane fouling and cleaning in FO mode
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BSA and alginate fouling. As shown in Figure 3(a), negligible BSA fouling was observed with
286
both PA and GO membranes when they were tested in FO mode, where the front (dense) side of
287
the support faced the feed solution while the back (porous) side faced the draw solution.
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calcium ions were present, there was ~17% flux decline for the PA membrane but a negligible
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decline for the GO membrane (Figure 3(b)).
When
It is believed that the slightly aggravated BSA
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fouling for the PA membrane was caused by the bridging effects of calcium ions that formed
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complexes with carboxylate groups from both BSA molecules and PA membrane surfaces.51, 52
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Compared with BSA fouling, alginate fouling caused more flux decline especially for
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the PA membrane under the tested conditions.
As shown in Figure 3(c-d), the water flux of the
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PA membrane decreases to ~80% and ~60% of the initial flux for the cases without and with
295
calcium ions, respectively.
296
presence of calcium is known to be the bridging effects of calcium ions that cause higher
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intermolecular interaction forces and form a gel-like alginate fouling layer on the PA
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membrane.51, 52
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even when calcium ions were present.
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GO membrane is comparable with or slightly better than the PA membrane when operated in FO
301
mode.
302
Flux recovery by cleaning. Immediately after fouling, a membrane was physically cleaned by
303
flushing the membrane surface with DI water for 15 min at an increased cross-flow rate of 21
304
cm/s.
305
restored to the initial level by physical rinsing.
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membrane after cleaning stays between ~80 to ~90% of the initial water flux, even when there is
307
no obvious flux decline during the fouling cycle.
308
hypothetically attributed to the re-arrangement of the PAH/GO double-layers during cleaning, as
309
reported on self-assembled polymeric multi-layers.41 To verify this hypothesis, a GO membrane
310
was tested with the same fouling and cleaning protocols but without the adding of any foulants in
311
the fouling solution, as described in the Supporting Information.
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water flux was ~90% (Figure S2), suggesting that the decreased water flux was not due to
The mechanism underlying the aggravated alginate fouling in the
In contrast, the alginate fouling of the GO membrane was still relatively mild Therefore, the overall antifouling performance of the
As shown in Figure 3, the water flux of the fouled PA membranes can be effectively
13
Interestingly, the water flux of the fouled GO
Such a water flux decrease after cleaning is
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The resulting final recovered
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membrane fouling.
Then, a second fouling and cleaning cycle was conducted (as described in
314
the Supporting Information).
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same level, further confirming that the structure of PAH/GO double-layers changes under the
316
increased cross-flow shear force during the cleaning cycle but stayed stable afterwards.
It is found that the GO membrane water flux remained at the
317
Figure 3
318
Contradicting effects of GO properties on membrane fouling
319
Considering the GO membrane has a few properties (e.g., simultaneously being hydrophilic and
320
hydrophobic, negatively charged, and adsorptive) that may have opposing effects on membrane
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fouling behavior, we characterized the charge, hydrophilicity, and adsorption properties of GO
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and PA membrane surfaces in order to identify the dominating mechanisms for antifouling.
323
pH increases from 4 to 10, the GO membrane exhibits no more than 2 negatively charged
324
functional sites/nm2, while the charge density of the PA membrane increases from very low (~0)
325
to 22 sites/nm2 (Figure 4(a)).
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relatively low density of carboxylate functional groups in the GO nanosheets and possibly their
327
partial neutralization by positively charged PAH during the electrostatic layer-by-layer assembly
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of GO and PAH layers.41
329
foulant-surface interactions and thus reduces the fouling potential of the membrane surface,51-53
330
most likely plays an important role in improving the antifouling property of the GO membrane
331
especially in the presence of calcium ions.
As
The low charge density of GO membrane can be attributed to the
Because the low carboxylate group density, which weakens the
332
As compared in Figure 4(b), the GO membrane surface has a the water contact angle of
333
less than 20° and thus is much more hydrophilic than the PA membrane surface, which has a
334
water contact angle of ~60°.
335
decrease in the interactions between foulants and the GO membrane surface, thereby lowering
Such high hydrophilicity of the GO membrane contributes to a
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the membrane fouling propensity.
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On the other hand, other GO properties, such as large surface area (around 2630 m2/g) 17
338
and the hydrophobicity of the un-oxidized region of the GO carbon basal plane, may provide
339
high adsorption capability towards organic foulants, thereby potentially undermining the
340
antifouling properties of the GO membrane.
341
used QCM-D to evaluate the adsorption of organic foulants onto the GO and PA membrane
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surfaces.
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four times more for BSA and five times more for alginate) than the PA membrane.
344
the insignificant flux decline observed in Fig. 3 for the GO membrane, apparently the higher
345
adsorption capacity of GO does not appreciably deteriorate its antifouling property.
346
explanation for such phenomena is that organic foulants are adsorbed mainly on the basal plane
347
of GO nanosheets while water enters the GO membrane primarily around the oxidized edges of
348
GO nanosheets (as illustrated in Figure 4(d)).
349
nanosheets does not create much hindrance to the water flux of a GO membrane.
In order to understand such negative effects, we
As depicted in Figure 4(c), the GO membrane adsorbed much more foulants (nearly
350
Considering
Our
As a result, foulant adsorption onto GO
Figure 4
351
Membrane fouling and cleaning in PRO mode
352
Figure 5 demonstrates the fouling behavior of GO and PA membranes in PRO mode, where the
353
front (dense) side of the support faced the draw solution and the back (porous) side now faced
354
the feed solution.
355
much less flux decline and hence lower organic fouling than the PA membrane, which has a
356
porous surface on the back side.
357
to the fact that foulants accumulated within the porous support of the PA membrane while the
358
GO layer coated on the back side successfully prevented the foulants from blocking the water
The GO membrane, with its back surface sealed with a GO layer, exhibited
Such a huge difference in fouling behavior is apparently due
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channels of the GO membrane.
360
apparent discrepancy in the cleaning efficiencies for the two membranes — the flux recovery for
361
the PA membrane by physical cleaning was in general much lower than that of the GO
362
membrane.
363
This statement is further reinforced by the existence of an
Figure 5
364
The observations that the GO membrane exhibited significantly better antifouling
365
behavior than the PA membrane in PRO mode can be schematically explained by Figure 6(a).
366
For the PA membrane, foulants are easily trapped inside the porous support, thereby causing
367
severe irreversible fouling that practically cannot be removed by the shear force of physical
368
cleaning.
369
barrier that sufficiently prevents the foulants from entering the pores of the support, making the
370
foulants only possibly accumulate on the surface of the GO membrane.
371
force of physical cleaning can readily flush off the foulants deposited on the membrane surface
372
and thus the membrane permeability can be satisfactorily restored.
In contrast, the GO layer created on the back surface of the GO membrane acts as a
As a result, the shear
373
To provide more evidence on the effectiveness of the GO layer in preventing the
374
occurrence of irreversible fouling, the FTIR spectra of the active layers of both clean and fouled
375
PA and GO membranes in PRO mode were recorded (Figure 6(b)).
376
membrane active layers show obvious peaks that are indicative of BSA (amide I at 1652 cm-1,
377
amide II at 1531 cm-1) and alginate (asymmetric –COO- stretching vibration at 1603 cm-1, CH-
378
OH stretching vibration at 1030 cm-1), respectively.
379
(front side) of the fouled GO membrane are essentially identical to that of the clean GO
380
membrane (Figure 6(c)), while the spectra of the support (back side) of the corresponding fouled
381
GO membranes do show additional peaks attributable to foulants (Figure S3). Such comparison
16
It is seen that the fouled PA
In contrast, the spectra of the active layer
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382
further proves that, when operated in PRO mode, the GO membrane is able to keep the foulants
383
only on its surface due to the blocking effect of the GO layer on the back side of the support,
384
whereas PA membrane suffers the accumulation of foulants inside the unblocked porous support.
385
Figure 6
386
Promise of using GO-coated membranes for fouling control in engineered osmosis
387
The large lateral dimensions of GO nanosheets enable the convenient assembly of
388
semipermeable thin films on both sides of a membrane support with relatively large open pores
389
on the bottom.
390
traditional membrane synthesis approaches or surface modification techniques with soft
391
polymers.
392
a porous electron spun support,54 but it still remains a challenge to seal the back side of the
393
support.
394
the resulting GO membrane almost immune to irreversible fouling and thus ideal for use in
395
engineered osmosis such as PRO.
396
process can be best improved, leading to a more sustainable energy supply.
Such a dense coverage of a porous support is normally not achievable using
It has been recently reported that a dense layer can be successfully created on top of
In comparison, coating a GO layer on the back side of an asymmetric support makes
Consequently, the energy-generating efficiency of the PRO
397 398
Supporting Information
399
Complete information about materials and methods, QCM-D monitoring of the GO membrane
400
assembly (Figure S1), effects of rinsing on membrane flux (Figure S2), and FTIR spectra of the
401
membrane support layers before and after PRO fouling (Figure S3). This material is available
402
free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
403 404
Acknowledgements
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This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant nos.
406
CBET-1351430 and CBET-1154572. We thank Yan Kang and Yoontaek Oh for their
407
experimental assistance. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not
408
necessarily reflect those of the sponsors.
409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446
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13. Santos, C. M.; Tria, M. C. R.; Vergara, R. A. M. V.; Ahmed, F.; Advincula, R. C.; Rodrigues, D. F., Antimicrobial graphene polymer (pvk-go) nanocomposite films. Chem Commun 2011, 47, (31), 8892-8894. 14. Perreault, F.; Tousley, M. E.; Elimelech, M., Thin-film composite polyamide membranes functionalized with biocidal graphene oxide nanosheets. 2013. 15. Zhao, G.; Jiang, L.; He, Y.; Li, J.; Dong, H.; Wang, X.; Hu, W., Sulfonated graphene for persistent aromatic pollutant management. Advanced Materials 2011, 23, (34), 3959-3963. 16. Zhao, G.; Li, J.; Ren, X.; Chen, C.; Wang, X., Few-layered graphene oxide nanosheets as superior sorbents for heavy metal ion pollution management. Environmental Science & Technology 2011, 45, (24), 10454-10462. 17. Lambert, T. N.; Chavez, C. A.; Hernandez-Sanchez, B.; Lu, P.; Bell, N. S.; Ambrosini, A.; Friedman, T.; Boyle, T. J.; Wheeler, D. R.; Huber, D. L., Synthesis and characterization of titania-graphene nanocomposites. J Phys Chem C 2009, 113, (46), 19812-19823. 18. Zinadini, S.; Zinatizadeh, A. A.; Rahimi, M.; Vatanpour, V.; Zangeneh, H., Preparation of a novel antifouling mixed matrix pes membrane by embedding graphene oxide nanoplates. Journal of Membrane Science 2014, 453, 292-301. 19. Choi, W.; Choi, J.; Bang, J.; Lee, J. H., Layer-by-layer assembly of graphene oxide nanosheets on polyamide membranes for durable reverse-osmosis applications. Acs Appl Mater Inter 2013, 5, (23), 12510-12519. 20. Gao, Y.; Hu, M.; Mi, B., Membrane surface modification with tio2-graphene oxide for enhanced photocatalytic performance. Journal of Membrane Science 2014, 455, 349–356. 21. Hu, M.; Mi, B., Enabling graphene oxide nanosheets as water separation membranes. Environmental Science & Technology 2013, 47, (8), 3715-3723. 22. Achilli, A.; Childress, A. E., Pressure retarded osmosis: From the vision of sidney loeb to the first prototype installation - review. Desalination 2010, 261, (3), 205-211. 23. Loeb, S., Production of energy from concentrated brines by pressure-retarded osmosis : I. Preliminary technical and economic correlations. Journal of Membrane Science 1976, 1, (0), 4963. 24. Loeb, S., Osmotic power-plants. Science 1975, 189, (4203), 654-655. 25. Loeb, S.; Titelman, L.; Korngold, E.; Freiman, J., Effect of porous support fabric on osmosis through a loeb-sourirajan type asymmetric membrane. Journal of Membrane Science 1997, 129, (2), 243-249. 26. Yip, N. Y.; Elimelech, M., Influence of natural organic matter fouling and osmotic backwash on pressure retarded osmosis energy production from natural salinity gradients. Environ Sci Technol 2013, 47, (21), 12607-12616. 27. Yip, N. Y.; Elimelech, M., Thermodynamic and energy efficiency analysis of power generation from natural salinity gradients by pressure retarded osmosis. Environ Sci Technol 2012, 46, (9), 5230-5239. 28. Lin, S.; Straub, A. P.; Elimelech, M., Thermodynamic limits of extractable energy by pressure retarded osmosis. Energy & Environmental Science 2014, 7, (8), 2706-2714. 29. Chu, S.; Majumdar, A., Opportunities and challenges for a sustainable energy future. Nature 2012, 488, (7411), 294-303. 30. Logan, B. E.; Elimelech, M., Membrane-based processes for sustainable power generation using water. Nature 2012, 488, (7411), 313-319. 31. Pattle, R. E., Production of electric power by mixing fresh and salt water in the hydroelectric pile. Nature 1954, 174, (4431), 660-660.
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32. She, Q. H.; Jin, X.; Li, Q. H.; Tang, C. Y. Y., Relating reverse and forward solute diffusion to membrane fouling in osmotically driven membrane processes. Water Res 2012, 46, (7), 2478-2486. 33. She, Q. H.; Wong, Y. K. W.; Zhao, S. F.; Tang, C. Y. Y., Organic fouling in pressure retarded osmosis: Experiments, mechanisms and implications. Journal of Membrane Science 2013, 428, 181-189. 34. Parida, V.; Ng, H. Y., Forward osmosis organic fouling: Effects of organic loading, calcium and membrane orientation. Desalination 2013, 312, 88-98. 35. Thelin, W. R.; Sivertsen, E.; Holt, T.; Brekke, G., Natural organic matter fouling in pressure retarded osmosis. Journal of Membrane Science 2013, 438, 46-56. 36. Zhang, M. M.; Hou, D. X.; She, Q. H.; Tang, C. Y. Y., Gypsum scaling in pressure retarded osmosis: Experiments, mechanisms and implications. Water Res 2014, 48, 387-395. 37. Motsa, M. M.; Mamba, B. B.; D'Haese, A.; Hoek, E. M. V.; Verliefde, A. R. D., Organic fouling in forward osmosis membranes: The role of feed solution chemistry and membrane structural properties. Journal of Membrane Science 2014, 460, 99-109. 38. Mi, B.; Elimelech, M., Organic fouling of forward osmosis membranes: Fouling reversibility and cleaning without chemical reagents. Journal of Membrane Science 2010, 348, (1–2), 337-345. 39. Qi, S. R.; Qiu, C. Q.; Zhao, Y.; Tang, C. Y. Y., Double-skinned forward osmosis membranes based on layer-by-layer assembly-fo performance and fouling behavior. Journal of Membrane Science 2012, 405, 20-29. 40. Li, X.; Cai, T.; Chung, T.-S., Anti-fouling behavior of hyperbranched polyglycerolgrafted poly(ether sulfone) hollow fiber membranes for osmotic power generation. Environ Sci Technol 2014. 41. Hu, M.; Mi, B., Layer-by-layer assembly of graphene oxide membranes via electrostatic interaction. Journal of Membrane Science 2014, 469, (0), 80-87. 42. Kang, Y.; Emdadi, L.; Lee, M. J.; Liu, D.; Mi, B., Layer-by-layer assembly of zeolite/polyelectrolyte nanocomposite membranes with high zeolite loading. Environmental Science & Technology Letters 2014, 1, (12), 504-509. 43. Yu, H. Y.; Kang, Y.; Liu, Y. L.; Mi, B., Grafting polyzwitterions onto polyamide by click chemistry and nucleophilic substitution on nitrogen: A novel approach to enhance membrane fouling resistance. Journal of Membrane Science 2014, 449, 50-57. 44. Tiraferri, A.; Yip, N. Y.; Phillip, W. A.; Schiffman, J. D.; Elimelech, M., Relating performance of thin-film composite forward osmosis membranes to support layer formation and structure. Journal of Membrane Science 2011, 367, (1–2), 340-352. 45. Liu, Y.; Mi, B., Effects of organic macromolecular conditioning on gypsum scaling of forward osmosis membranes. Journal of Membrane Science 2014, 450, 153-161. 46. Tiraferri, A.; Yip, N. Y.; Straub, A. P.; Castrillon, S. R. V.; Elimelech, M., A method for the simultaneous determination of transport and structural parameters of forward osmosis membranes. Journal of Membrane Science 2013, 444, 523-538. 47. Gosting, L. J.; Morris, M. S., Diffusion studies on dilute aqueous sucrose solutions at 1 and 25° with the gouy interference method. Journal of the American Chemical Society 1949, 71, (6), 1998-2006. 48. Perry, L. A.; Coronell, O., Reliable, bench-top measurements of charge density in the active layers of thin-film composite and nanocomposite membranes using quartz crystal microbalance technology. Journal of Membrane Science 2013, 429, (0), 23-33.
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49. Duong, P. H. H.; Chung, T. S.; Wei, S.; Irish, L., Highly permeable double-skinned forward osmosis membranes for anti-fouling in the emulsified oil-water separation process. Environ Sci Technol 2014, 48, (8), 4537-4545. 50. Wang, K. Y.; Ong, R. C.; Chung, T. S., Double-skinned forward osmosis membranes for reducing internal concentration polarization within the porous sublayer. Ind Eng Chem Res 2010, 49, (10), 4824-4831. 51. Mi, B.; Elimelech, M., Chemical and physical aspects of organic fouling of forward osmosis membranes. Journal of Membrane Science 2008, 320, (1–2), 292-302. 52. Li, Q.; Elimelech, M., Organic fouling and chemical cleaning of nanofiltration membranes: Measurements and mechanisms. Environmental Science & Technology 2004, 38, (17), 4683-4693. 53. Mo, Y. H.; Tiraferri, A.; Yip, N. Y.; Adout, A.; Huang, X.; Elimelech, M., Improved antifouling properties of polyamide nanofiltration membranes by reducing the density of surface carboxyl groups. Environ Sci Technol 2012, 46, (24), 13253-13261. 54. Bui, N.-N.; McCutcheon, J. R., Nanofiber supported thin-film composite membrane for pressure-retarded osmosis. Environmental Science & Technology 2014, 48, (7), 4129-4136.
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561 562
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563 564 565
Figure 1. The structure and surface morphology of (a) GO and (b) PA membranes.
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566
0.4
GO
2
8
Solute Flux (mole/m /h)
(a)
2
Water Flux (L/m /h)
10
6
PA 4 2 0 0
4
8
12
Osmotic pressure (bar)
567
(c)
Membrane PA GO
(b) PA
0.3 0.2 0.1
GO
0.0 0
4
8
12
Osmotic pressure (bar)
A (LMH/bar) 0.82 5.4
B (LMH) 2.8 2.1
S (µm) 218 354
568 569
Figure 2. The experimental measurements and corresponding model fitting curves of (a) water
570
flux and (b) solute flux for GO and PA membranes. The fitted model parameters are
571
summarized in a table (c).
572
11 cm/s, with a feed solution of DI water and a draw solution of sucrose. In order to vary the
573
osmotic pressure of the draw solution, the sucrose concentration was adjusted in the range of 0.2
574
to 0.9 M.
The experiments were conducted in FO mode at a crossflow rate of
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575 200 mg/L BSA, no Ca2+
(b)
200 mg/L BSA, 0.5 mM Ca2+
PA
GO 1.0
0.4 0.2 100
200
300
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
500 520
Cumulative Volume (mL)
Normalized Flux
1.0 0.8
200 mg/L Alginate, no Ca2+ GO
1.0
PA
0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
100 200 300 500 520 Cumulative Volume (mL)
(d) 200 mg/L Alginate, 0.5 mM Ca2+
Normalized Flux
(c)
After Cleaning
576
PA After Cleaning
0.6
0.0 0
Normalized Flux
GO
0.8
After Cleaning
Normalized Flux
1.0
0.8 0.6
PA
0.4 0.2 0.0 0
100 200 300 500 520 Cumulative Volume (mL)
GO After Cleaning
(a)
100 200 300 500 520 Cumulative Volume (mL)
577 578
Figure 3. Comparison of the fouling and cleaning behavior of GO and PA membranes in FO
579
mode with different fouling conditions.
580
an overall ionic strength of 50 mM.
581
water flux of ~ 4 µm/s (14.4 L/m2/h), a cross-flow rate of 11 cm/s, and a draw solution of sucrose.
582
The fouling experiment was stopped when the cumulative volume reached ~400 mL, and then
583
the membrane was cleaned with DI water for 15 min at a cross-flow velocity of 21 cm/s. The
584
cleaned membrane was then tested for flux recovery with the same initial conditions as used in
585
the fouling experiments but without the adding of any foulants.
The fouling solution was dosed with NaCl to maintain
Each fouling experiment was performed with an initial
586 587
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Negative Charge Density (sites/nm )
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588
25 20
(a)
15
PA
10 5
GO
0 4
7
10
pH
(c)
2
Foulant Adsorption (µg/cm )
3 GO
2
1
GO PA PA
0 BSA
Alginate
589 590
Figure 4. Comparison of (a) negative charge density, (b) water contact angle, and (c) foulant
591
adsorption property of the GO and PA membranes; and (d) the schematic illustration of foulant
592
deposition on the surface of the GO membrane.
593
foulant adsorption capacity were measured by QCM-D. The negative charge density of the
594
membranes was probed by 1 mM CsCl solution at different pHs using GO- and PA-coated
595
sensors. The foulant adsorption capability of the two membranes was evaluated by exposing the
596
sensors to model foulant solutions containing 200 mg/L foulants and 50 mM NaCl.
Both the negative charge density and the
597
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2+ (a) 200 mg/L BSA, no Ca
2+ (b) 200 mg/L BSA, 0.5 mM Ca
1.0
0.6
PA
0.4 0.2 0.0 0
598
Normalized Flux
After Cleaning
Normalized Flux
0.6 PA
0.2 0.0 0
0.2
100 200 300 500 520 Cumulative Volume (mL) 200 mg/L Alginate, 0.5 mM Ca2+
1.0
0.8
0.4
0.4
(d)
GO
PA
0.6
0.0 0
100 200 300 500 520 Cumulative Volume (mL)
2+ (c) 200 mg/L Alginate, no Ca
1.0
0.8
GO
0.8 0.6 0.4
PA
0.2 0.0 0
100 200 300 500 520 Cumulative Volume (mL)
After Cleaning
0.8
GO
After Cleaning
Normalized Flux
GO
After Cleaning
Normalized Flux
1.0
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100 200 300 500 520 Cumulative Volume (mL)
599 600
Figure 5. Comparison of the fouling and cleaning behavior of GO and PA membranes in PRO
601
mode under different fouling conditions.
602
as those described in Figure 3.
The fouling and cleaning experiments were the same
603 604
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605
606
(b)
(c)
Transmittance
1652
1531
800
GO BSA-fouled GO Alginate-fouled GO
1603
Alginatefouled PA
1385
BSAfouled PA
1030
Transmittance
PA
1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 -1 Wavenumber (cm )
800
1000 1200 1400 1600 Wavenumber (cm-1)
1800
607 608
Figure 6. (a) Mechanisms for the physical cleaning of PA and GO membranes, (b) FTIR spectra
609
of the active layers of the clean and fouled PA membranes, and (c) FTIR spectra of the active
610
layers of the clean and fouled GO membranes, all in PRO mode.
611 612
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