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Thermo-responsive Acidic Microgels as Functional Draw Agents for Forward Osmosis Desalination Yusak Hartanto, Masoumeh Zargar, Haihui Wang, Bo Jin, and Sheng Dai Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 30 Mar 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 30, 2016
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Thermo-responsive Acidic Microgels as Functional
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Draw Agents for Forward Osmosis Desalination
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Yusak Hartanto1, Masoumeh Zargar1, Haihui Wang2, Bo Jin1, Sheng Dai*1
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1
School of Chemical Engineering, The University of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia
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2
School of Chemistry & Chemical Engineering, South China University of Technology,
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Guangzhou, 510640, PR China
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* To whom corresponding should be addressed
[email protected] ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Abstract
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Thermo-responsive microgels with carboxylic acid functionalization have been recently
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introduced as an attractive draw agent for forward osmosis (FO) desalination, where the
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microgels showed promising water flux and water recovery performance. In this study, various
31
co-monomers containing different carboxylic acid and sulfonic acid functional groups were
32
copolymerized with N-isopropylacrylamide (NP) to yield a series of functionalized thermo-
33
responsive microgels possessing different acidic groups and hydrophobicities. The purified
34
microgels were examined as the draw agents for FO application, and the results show the
35
response of water flux and water recovery was significantly affected by various acidic co-
36
monomers. The thermo-responsive microgel with itaconic acid shows the best overall
37
performance with an initial water flux of 44.8 LMH, water recovery up to 47.2 % and apparent
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water flux of 3.1 LMH. This study shows that the incorporation of hydrophilic dicarboxylic acid
39
functional groups into MCG-NP microgels leads to the enhancement on water adsorption and
40
overall performance. Our work elucidates in detail on the structure-property relationship of
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thermo-responsive microgels in their applications as FO draw agents and would be beneficial for
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future design and development of high performance FO desalination.
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Keywords: microgels; forward osmosis; desalination; water flux; water recovery; N-
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isopropylacrylamide.
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Introduction
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Membrane-based desalination process offers a more viable option to provide fresh water for
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global water scarcity than thermal-based desalination process in terms of energy consumption 1.
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Reverse osmosis (RO) process is currently the most common membrane desalination approach
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where hydraulic pressure is applied to overcome the osmotic pressure of saline water to produce
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fresh water. Although this technology consumes less energy than thermal desalination methods,
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there is a growing demand to develop more energy-efficient desalination process.
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Forward osmosis (FO) desalination is an attractive membrane-based desalination process
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which consists of a two-stage process of water drawing and water recovery. The former relies on
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the osmotic gradient between saline feed solution and draw solution to drive water adsorption
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and the latter is an additional separation unit to recover the adsorbed water. To date, the adsorbed
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water can be recovered by means of some simple separation methods such as pressure-driven
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membrane, thermal separation, precipitation, electro-dialysis and stimuli-response and the
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recycled draw solute can be concentrated and reused for further water drawing 2. For the water
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drawing process, both membrane and draw solute affect the performance of overall FO
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desalination. Although there is a rapid development on FO desalination membranes, research on
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exploring high performance draw solutes is still limited. This is especially important if fresh
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water has to be recovered as the final product or if the major FO desalination energy
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consumption comes from the dewatering stage 3.
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Ideally, suitable draw solute materials have to meet three key criteria, a high osmotic pressure,
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economical regeneration process and low impact on internal concentration polarization 4.
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Ammonium bicarbonate (NH4HCO3)
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have been proposed as the draw solutes for FO desalination due to their ease of recovery via
5
and and trimethylamine-carbon dioxide (TMA-CO2)
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distillation process. However, trace residuals left behind in unacceptable level during the
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separation process makes these compounds unsuitable for producing fresh water for potable use
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divalent salts of Na2SO4 or MgSO4
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their higher osmotic pressures 9. The process was hybridized with nanofiltration process to
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produce potable water and recover the draw solutes. The nanofiltration process used to produce
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potable water and recover draw solutes has some drawbacks such as the possibility of membrane
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scaling 9 and high energy consumption 10.
. Other attempts have been developed to use divalent inorganic salts as the draw solutes. The 8
produced higher water flux than monovalent salts due to
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Instead of using inorganic salts for FO desalination, synthetic materials are proposed as next
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generation draw solutes. The large molecular size of these materials makes the recovery process
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easier and cheaper to operate 10. Hydrophilic magnetic nanoparticles have been proposed as the
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draw solute for FO desalination, where the surface of nanoparticles were coated with organic
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compounds such as citrate
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Isopropylacrylamide)
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styrene 4-sulfonate)
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aggregation in the recovery process limit its end-use applications. Meanwhile, a variety of
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synthetic organic materials, such as polymers
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switchable solvents 33, have also been employed as draw solutes for FO process. Among them,
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polymer-based draw solute shows comparable performance and recovery cost as inorganic salts.
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Polyacrylic sodium salt was able to generate high water flux as the seawater draw solute and had
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lower salt leakage 21. However, the use of polyacrylic sodium salt might release sodium ions to
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final water product. In addition, the energy cost for separation using ultrafiltration membrane
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might not be lower than the RO desalination 3.
15
17
11
, dextran
12
, triethylene glycol
, polyacrylic acid 13
13-14
, 2-pyrrolidone
, poly(ethylene glycol) diacid
16
14
, poly(N-
and poly(sodium
. Low water flux during the water drawing course and nanoparticle
18-29
, hydroacid complex
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30-31
, carbon dots
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and
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Recently, stimuli-responsive hydrogels were introduced as an alternative draw solute for low
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energy desalination technology and to overcome the reverse draw solute problem 26, 34. However,
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the low water fluxes of these hydrogels restrict them for the FO desalination application. Later,
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functionalized thermo-responsive microgels were proposed to improve the FO desalination
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performance
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recovery and overall water production when compared to bulk hydrogels due to the large surface
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area of microgels. Thus, it is necessary to carry out in depth study on functionality of these
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thermo-responsive microgels. In this study, we systematically design and investigate the effect
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of incorporation of various functional acidic co-monomers containing carboxylic groups and
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sulfonic acid group on N-isopropylacrylamide-based thermo-responsive microgels. Our results
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show that different functional co-monomers have significant impact on both water flux and water
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recovery ability in FO desalination process and the significant enhancement on water flux using
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dicarboxylic group co-monomers has been observed.
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and these microgels have showed significantly enhanced water flux, water
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Materials and Methods
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Materials
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N-isopropylacrylamide (NP, > 98%), purchased from Tokyo Chemical Industry, was purified
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by recrystallization in n-hexane and dried overnight. N-N’-methylenebisacrylamide (MBA,
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>98%), acrylic acid (AA, 99%), methacrylic acid (MAA, 99%), itaconic acid (IA, >99%), maleic
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acid (MA, >99%), 2-acrylamido-2-methyl-1-propanesulfonic acid (AMPS, 99%) and ammonium
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persulfate (APS) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. Cellulose triacetate forward osmosis
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(CTA-FO) membranes were purchased from Hydration Technologies Inc. (HTI, USA).
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Synthesis of thermoresponsive microgels
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The N-isopropylacrylamide-based microgels with different functional co-monomers were
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synthesized using surfactant-free semi-batch emulsion polymerization process. In a typical
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experiment, 0.475 g of NIPAM, 0.025 g of functional co-monomers and 0.005 g of MBA
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(crosslinkers) were dissolved in 47 mL of Millipore or deionized water. The solution was then
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transferred to a 250 mL three-necked flask fitted with a condenser, a mechanical stirrer and gas
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inlet/outlet. The semi-batch feeding solution was prepared by dissolving 3.325 g of NIPAM,
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0.1725 g of functional co-monomers and 0.035 g of MBA in 50 mL of Millipore water. The
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detailed synthesis recipes for each microgel sample can be found in Table S1.
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After degassing batch and semi-batch feeding solutions for 45 minutes, the batch solution was
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heated to 70 °C under nitrogen atmosphere. 3.0 mL of APS solution (0.4 g) was injected to
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initiate the polymerization. Semi-batch feeding solution was injected at a rate of 3 mL/hour one
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hour after the batch solution turned into cloudy. The polymerization was carried out overnight
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under continuous stirring and nitrogen blanket. After cooling, the microgels were purified using
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membrane dialysis (MWCO 12–14 kDa) against Millipore water for three days to remove any
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unreacted residuals. Finally, the purified microgels were dried and grounded into fine powder.
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Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) measurement
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Attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) was used to
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confirm the incorporation of functional co-monomers into the microgels. FTIR bands were
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recorded using a Thermos Scientific NICOLET 6700 spectrometer equipped with a diamond
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ATR with wavenumber resolution of 4 cm-1 in the range of 400 – 4000 cm-1.
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Dynamic light scattering
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Dynamic light scattering was used to measure the hydrodynamic diameters (dh) of the
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microgels at different temperatures using a Zetasizer (Malvern, Nano-ZS). The swelling ratio
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(SR) of microgel is calculated using the following equation:
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SR =
142
where SR is the swelling ratio of the microgels, dh,25 (nm) is the hydrodynamic diameter of the
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microgels at 25 oC and dh,40 (nm) is the hydrodynamic diameter of the microgels at 40 oC.
, ,
(1)
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Conductometric and potentiometric titration
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The exact amount of acidic co-monomers in the microgels was determined using
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conductometric and potentiometric titrations. Typically, the pH of a 100 mL MCG-NP-MAA
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microgel dispersion (~ 1 mg/mL) was adjusted to 3.5 using concentrated hydrochloric acid. The
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solution was then back titrated using a 0.1 M NaOH solution. After each addition of NaOH,
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solution conductivity and pH were measured using a pre-calibrated Aqua-CP/A pH and
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conductivity meter.
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Water flux evaluation Grounded microgel powders (100 mg) were placed in our customized FO membrane setup 35
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equipped with an on-line conductivity monitoring system
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adopted in this experiment was the active layer facing draw solute (AL-DS) with an effective
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area of 3.16 cm2. The powder area density for all experiments is 0.1 g/3.16 cm2. Calibrated
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conductivity probe was immersed in the feed solution of 2000 ppm NaCl to continuously
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monitor the conductivity against time for two hours. The volume of feed solution was 190 mL.
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. The membrane configuration
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Before any measurement, the FO membrane was soaked overnight in the feed solution and the
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system was conditioned by contacting the membrane surface area in 2000 ppm NaCl solution for
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30 minutes and monitoring the conductivity until constant prior to placing the microgels on the
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membrane. The conductivity data can be converted into the concentration of sodium chloride in
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solution through a calibration curve.
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The water flux was calculated using the conductivity data based on the mass balance equation which is described below: V =
C V C
(2)
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J =
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where Vt (mL) is the volume of feed at time t, Vi (mL) is the initial volume of feed, Ci (ppm) is
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the initial feed concentration, Ct (ppm) is the feed concentration at time t, Jw (LMH) is the water
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flux, A (m2) is the effective membrane surface area and ∆t (h) is the time interval where the
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conductivity of the feed solution changes.
(3)
∆
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Water recovery
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The swelled microgels were transferred to centrifuge tubes and weighed after the two-hour
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water adsorption period. The microgels were then centrifuged at 40 oC and 10,000 rpm (9,300 g)
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for 10 minutes to separate adsorbed water from polymer microgels. The water recovered from
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deswelled microgels was calculated using the following equations:
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C =
(4)
W = W! (1 − C ) 179
&
R =
'
(5)
x 100%
(6)
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where CP (g microgels/g H2O) is the concentration of microgels in the centrifuge tube, WP (g) is
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the weight of dry microgel powders, WW (g) is the weight of water adsorbed by the microgels
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determined from water flux measurement, WWG (g) is the weight of water in the microgels, WH
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(g) is the weight of microgels in the centrifuge tube, WR (g) is the weight of adsorbed water
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recovered from the tube and R (%) is the percentage of water recovered from the deswelled
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microgels.
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Apparent Water Flux Apparent water flux is defined as the amount of water that can be released from the microgels per unit area per unit cycling time and it is written as follows 36: J+,, =
-.
(7)
/012 + 04 56
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where Japp (LMH) is the apparent water flux, mW (L) is the volume of water that can be
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released during dewatering process, Teq (h) is the estimated time to reach equilibrium water
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content of microgel from its dried state, TR (h) is the estimated time needed to dewater the
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microgels from centrifugation process and A (m2) is the effective membrane area.
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Microgels recycling evaluation
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The microgels after the first cycle were taken from the membrane setup and dried in oven until
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constant weight. The dried microgels were grounded into fine powders and placed in our setup
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for the second cycle measurement. The same approach was repeated for the third cycle. The
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water recovery cycle measurement was conducted using similar approach by gravimetric
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method.
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Results and Discussion
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Synthesis and characterization of thermo-responsive acidic microgels
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Surfactant-free emulsion polymerization process was employed to synthesize the microgels to
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avoid surfactant contamination on the final microgels. In this study, various carboxylic and
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sulfonic acid co-monomers are chosen to represent the different degrees of deprotonation of
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acidic co-monomers. The chemical structures of different acidic co-monomers selected in this
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study are shown in Figure 1. The co-monomers with carboxylic acid groups can be further
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divided into two main categories. The co-monomers with monocarboxylic acids are represented
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by acrylic acid and methacrylic acid while co-monomers with dicarboxylic acids are represented
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by maleic acid and itaconic acid. The co-monomer with sulfonic acid group is represented by 2-
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acrylamido-2-methyl-1-propanesulfonic acid.
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Figure 1 Different acidic co-monomers used to functionalize thermo-responsive N-
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isopropylacrylamide microgels.
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In order to confirm the successful copolymerization of these microgels, Fourier transform
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infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) analysis was carried out to identify functional groups within
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microgels. The FTIR spectra in Figure 2 show typical peaks corresponding to N-
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isopropylacrylamide at the bands around 1640 and 1550 cm−1 which are attributed to the C=O
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asymmetric stretching and the bending of the C-N. The peak at around 1450 cm−1 is also
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assigned to the stretching of the C-N bond and asymmetric bending of the C-H bond in the
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methyl groups of N-isopropylacrylamide
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except for MCG-NP-AMPS is attributed to the C=O bond in carboxylic acids which present in
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the microgels containing AA, MAA, IA and MA 37. The appearance of these peaks confirms the
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successful incorporation of co-monomers into microgels. Likewise, appearance of the band at
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1038 cm−1 for the MCG-NP-AMPS spectrum which is assigned to the symmetric stretching of
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the S=O in the sulfonic acid group verifies the successful synthesis of the microgel with sulfonic
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acid functional group 39.
37-38
. The band at 1711 cm−1 in all microgel spectra
230 231
Figure 2 FTIR spectra for different thermo-responsive acidic microgels
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The volume phase transition temperature (VPTT) and swelling ratio (SR) determined from
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dynamic light scattering are related to the required temperature in dewatering process and the
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amount of water can be adsorbed and recovered during the FO process. The hydrodynamic
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diameters of these microgels vs. temperatures are shown in Figure 3a. The incorporation of
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functional co-monomers with different acid dissociation constants shifts the VPTT depending on
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the degree of ionization and the hydrophobicities of the co-monomers 40,41. The dicarboxylic acid
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copolymer microgels have slightly higher volume phase transition temperatures than the
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monocarboxylic acid microgels. The swelling ratios of the copolymer microgels are shown in
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Figure 3b. The MCG-NP-MAA microgel has the highest swelling ratio among other microgels
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due to the presence of methyl group which contributes to its more hydrophobic character. On the
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other hand, MCG-NP-AMPS microgel has less responsive properties to temperature change due
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to existence of strong electrostatic repulsion from the strongly ionized sulfonic acid groups.
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Figure 3 (a) Hydrodynamic diameters of thermo-responsive microgels with various functional
247
acidic co-monomers measured between 25 oC and 50 oC at pH 6.8. (b) Swelling ratios of the
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above thermo-responsive acidic microgels.
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The percentages of incorporated acidic co-monomers into the microgels were determined by
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potentiometric and conductometric titration. The average amount of incorporated functional co-
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monomer is summarized in Table S1.
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Water flux profile for each functional co-monomers
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Equilibrium swelling time (EST) is the time needed to fully saturate the microgels with water
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and it is an important parameter in microgel-driven FO desalination. It is desirable that these
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microgels have relatively short equilibrium swelling time to maximize the amount of water that
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can be adsorbed during each cycle.
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Water flux and water content profiles for various microgels over a two-hour water adsorption
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period are shown in Figure 4. MCG-NP-MAA microgel reaches equilibrium in 110 minutes,
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longer than MCG-NP-AA microgel which is only 60 minutes. For comparison, MCG-NP
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microgel has an equilibrium swelling time of 100 minutes. The longest equilibrium time
264
observed in MCG-NP-MAA can be explained by presence of hydrophobic methyl functional
265
groups in MAA. These groups adopt compact structure during polymerization resulting that most
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of methacrylic acid moieties are located in the core after polymerization
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adsorption occurs due to the main contribution of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) chains, resulting
268
in a long period of time to saturate the microgels. Conversely, acrylic acid co-monomer is more
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evenly distributed throughout the microgel, resulting in shorter time to reach equilibrium 42.
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. This causes water
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Figure 4 Water flux profiles for different thermo-responsive microgels: (a) MCG-NP, (b) MCG-
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NP-MAA, (c) MCG-NP-AA, (d) MCG-NP-MA, (e) MCG-NP-IA ,and (f) MCG-NP-AMPS over
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a two-hour water adsorption period. The vertical green line represents the approximate
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equilibrium swelling time determined when the water content of the copolymer microgels
275
reaches plateau. Membrane orientation is AL-DS. Feed solution is 2000 ppm NaCl. pH of the
276
feed solution is 6.8. Temperature of the feed solution is 25 oC.
277 278
Shorter EST was observed in dicarboxylic acid copolymer microgels and sulfonic acid
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copolymer microgel due to stronger polymer solvation behavior of dicarboxylic copolymer
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microgels than monocarboxylic copolymer microgels. The strong solvation behavior originates
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from the presence of two acidic dissociation constant (pKa) in dicarboxylic acid co-monomers.
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MA has the pKa of 2.0 and 6.23 while IA has the pKa of 3.85 and 5.45 which imply two-stage
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ionization process of carboxylic acids and the higher amount of deprotonated carboxylic acid
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moieties in dicarboxylic acid copolymer microgels than monocarboxylic acid copolymer
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microgels
. MCG-NP-MA and MCG-NP-IA microgels requires 50 minutes to reaching their
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equilibrium conditions while MCG-NP-AMPS needs around 40 minutes to reach its equilibrium
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condition due to the presence of strongly ionized sulfonic acid 39.
288 289
Initial water flux, water recovery, apparent water flux and recyclability of various
290
copolymer microgels
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The effect of different functional co-monomers on initial water flux and water recovery is
292
shown in Figure 5. MCG-NP shows the lowest initial water flux among other copolymer
293
microgels. The initial water flux and water recovery for the MCG-NP employed as draw agent
294
are 7.5 LMH and 72.1%.
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Microgels functionalized with monocarboxylic acids, MCG-NP-MAA and MCG-NP-AA,
296
show enhanced initial water fluxes compared to MCG-NP microgel. The initial water fluxes for
297
MCG-NP-MAA and MCG-NP-AA are 10.9 LMH and 16.7 LMH, respectively. The major
298
improvement in water adsorption originates from the osmotic pressure generated within the
299
microgels due to the presence of deprotonated carboxylic acids
300
contains hydrophobic methyl groups which contribute to the slight hydrophobic character of this
301
microgel. As a result, relatively lower water flux and higher water recovery than MCG-NP-AA
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microgel were observed in MCG-NP-MAA. MCG-NP-MAA has water recovery of 76.7% while
303
MCG-NP-AA has water recovery of 55.8%.
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. However, MCG-NP-MAA
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Figure 5 Initial water flux and water recovery for different thermo-responsive microgels with
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various functional co-monomers. Membrane orientation is AL-DS. Feed solution is 2000 ppm
307
NaCl. pH of the feed solution is 6.8. Temperature of the feed solution is 25 oC.
308 309
Copolymer microgels with dicarboxylic acid and sulfonic acid show better initial water fluxes
310
than monocarboxylic acid coppolymer microgels. The water fluxes of MCG-NP-MA and MCG-
311
NP-IA are 39.1 LMH and 44.8 LMH, respectively. These high water fluxes are caused by the
312
presence of more hydrophilic acidic co-monomers that allows the microgels have more
313
deprotonated carboxylic acid groups. The water flux for MCG-NP-MA is slightly lower than
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MCG-NP-IA due to the higher value of second acid dissociation constant (pKa2) of maleic acid
315
(6.24) than the pKa2 of itaconic acid (5.45). Lower pKa2 of itaconic acid implies there are more
316
carboxylic acid groups in their deprotonated state than the ones present in MCG-NP-MA
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microgels at the same pH value. As a result, MCG-NP-IA has higher charge density than MCG-
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NP-MA which increases its osmotic pressure and its ability to draw water from saline solution in
319
a faster rate than MCG-NP-MA. Although dicarboxylic acids copolymer microgels have superior
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performance in water adsorption abililty, the water recovery is compromised due to high charge
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repulsions from deprotonated carboxylic acid groups. The water recovered from MCG-NP-MA
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and MCG-NP-IA are 39.1% and 47.2%. These recovery rates agree well with the swelling ratio
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data from Figure 3b where the swelling ratio of MCG-NP-IA is higher than the swelling ratio of
324
MCG-NP-MA. MCG-NP-AMPS microgel shows comparable water flux to dicarboxylic acid
325
copolymer microgels. The water flux for MCG-NP-AMPS is 42.9 LMH. However, no water can
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be released during recovery process due to strong electrostatic repulsion created by complete
327
dissociation of sulfonic acid functional group within the microgel. This prevents the microgels to
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collapse during the dewatering process
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traditional draw agents i.e. inorganic salts and polymer-based materials in Table 1.
35
. In this study, we also presents a comparison on
330
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Table 1 Comparison of FO Desalination Performance of Various Draw Agents
Draw Solution
NH4HCO3
MgSO4
Polysodium acrylate
N-Isopropylacrylamide-cosodium acrylate hydrogels N-Isopropylacrylamide-coacrylic acid microgels Tributylhexylphosphonium p-styrenesulfonate hydrogels N-Isopropylacrylamide-coitaconic acid microgels
Experimental Condtions Feed Concentration: 0.5 M Draw Concentration: 6 M Temperature: 50 oC PRO Mode Feed Concentration: 3,970 ppm brackish water Draw Concentration: 2 g/L PRO Mode Molecular weight: 1,800 Feed: DI Water Draw Concentration: 0.72 g/mL Temperature: 22 oC PRO Mode Feed: 2000 ppm NaCl Draw Mass: 1 g PRO Mode Feed: 2000 ppm NaCl Draw Mass: 0.1 g PRO Mode Feed: 2000 ppm NaCl Draw Mass: 0.6 g PRO Mode Feed: 2000 ppm NaCl Draw Mass: 0.1 g
Flux
FO Performance Water Apparent Recovery Flux
Ref.
23 LMH
-
-
5
13 LMH
15 %
-
8
19 LMH
-
-
21
0.6 LMH
62 %
-
26
23.8 LMH
52 %
-
35
2 LMH
50%
0.94 LMH
36
44.8 LMH
47.2 %
3.1 LMH
This Study
332 333
As can be seen from Table 1, the water flux generated by MCG-NP-IA microgel is relatively
334
high compared to other selected draw agents. The water recovery is also comparable with other
335
types of thermo-responsive hydrogels. In addition, our microgel has an apparent flux of 3.1 LMH
336
which is higher than the recent result of thermo-responsive polyionic liquid hydrogels 36.
337
In practical application, these microgels will not start from their dried state to adsorp water
338
from saline solution. As a result, the performance of microgel-based system needs to be
339
evaluated simultaneously in terms of their water adsorption and water recovery. Recently, a
340
concept of apparent water flux has been proposed to assess the overall performance of hydrogel-
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driven FO desalination 36. The apparent water fluxes of these microgels are shown in Figure 6.
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Apparent Water Flux (LMH)
3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0
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Functional Microgels
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Figure 6 Apparent water flux per 100 mg dried microgels for different thermo-responsive
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microgels with various functional co-monomers.
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MCG-NP has the lowest apparent water flux of 0.7 LMH among other copolymer microgels.
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MCG-NP-MAA and MCG-NP-AA microgels have higher apparent fluxes than MCG-NP
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microgel, 1.3 LMH and 2.2 LMH, respectively. On the other hand, MCG-NP-MA and MCG-NP-
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IA have apparent fluxes of 2.5 LMH and 3.1 LMH, respectively while the apparent flux of
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MCG-NP-AMPS microgel is close to zero as there is no water can be recovered from these
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microgels. The higher apparent water fluxes in dicarboxylic acid copolymer microgels are due to
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their relatively fast equilibrium time and higher water recovery. This means designing thermo-
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responsive microgels as functional draw agents by incorporating the right co-monomers is
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crucial to achieve high overall performance of microgel-driven FO desalination.
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Lab-scale FO experiments are usually operated in semi-batch mode due to the requirement of
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recovering the water as final product and reconcentrating the draw agents. In addition, operating
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microgel-based FO desalination in semi-batch cascade configuration allows reusing the draw
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agent after recovery process and achieving more sustainable water production
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. In this study,
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we studied the recyclability of our thermo-responsive microgels in three cycles. We select MCG-
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NP-MAA as a model for monocarboxylic acid functionalized microgels and MCG-NP-IA as a
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model for dicarboxylic acid functionalized microgels to be used in recycling process. As can be
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seen from Figure 7, both microgels show good recyclability in terms of water flux and water
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recovery in three cycles.
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364 365
Figure 7 Recyclability study of thermo-responsive microgels in three cycles: (a) Initial water
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flux recyclability and (b) Water recovery recyclability
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In summary, thermo-responsive microgels with varied functional acidic co-monomers were
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synthesized and were employed as draw agents for FO desalination. Their performance in terms
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of water flux, water recovery, apparent flux and recyclability were evaluated systematically.
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Thermo-responsive microgels with dicarboxylic acid functionalization show the best apparent
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water fluxes for microgel-based FO desalination. These microgels also hold a potential to be a
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viable alternative for low-energy desalination technology based on the theoretical energy
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requirement and cost analysis.
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Supporting Information Detailed synthesis recipe, pH and conductivity titration curves, cost
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comparison table of draw agents are available in Supporting Information file. This material is
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available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
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Author Contributions
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The manuscript was written through contributions of all authors. All authors have given approval to the final version of the manuscript.
383 384
Acknowledgement
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The authors would like to thank the financial support from the Australian Research Council
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(DP110102877). YH would like to appreciate the support of Adelaide Graduate Research
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Scholarships (AGRS).
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