1 research outputs found
Physical, Electrochemical, and Solvent Permeation Properties of Amphiphilic Conetwork Membranes Formed through Interlinking of Poly(vinylidene fluoride)-<i>Graft</i>-Poly[(2-dimethylamino)ethyl Methacrylate] with Telechelic Poly(ethylene glycol) and Small Molecular Weight Cross-Linkers
We report the preparation of dense and porous amphiphilic
conetwork
(APCN) membranes through the covalent interconnection of poly(vinylidene
fluoride)-graft-poly[(2-dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate]
(PVDF-g-PDMAEMA) copolymers with telechelic poly(ethylene
glycol) (PEG) or Ξ±,Ξ±-dichloro-p-xylene
(XDC). The dense APCN membranes exhibit varying solvent swelling and
mechanical properties depending on the compositions and overall crystallinity.
The crystallinity of both PVDF (20β47%) and PEG (9β17%)
is significantly suppressed in the dense APCNs prepared through the
interconnection of PVDF-g-PDMAEMA with reactive PEG
as compared to the APCN membranes (48β53%) prepared with XDC
as well as mechanical blend of PVDF-g-PDMAEMA plus
nonreactive PEG. The dense APCN membranes exhibit a good transport
number of monovalent ions and ionic conductivity. The APCN membrane
interconnected with PEG and containing binary ionic liquids exhibits
a room-temperature lithium ion conductivity of 0.52 mS/cm. On the
other hand, APCN ultrafiltration (UF) membranes exhibit organic solvent-resistant
behavior. The UF membrane obtained by interconnecting PVDF-g-PDMAEMA with telechelic PEG shows low protein fouling
propensity, higher hydrophilicity, and water flux as compared to membranes
prepared using XDC as the interconnecting agent. The significant effect
of the covalent interconnection of the amphiphilic graft copolymers
with telechelic PEG or XDC on the overall properties provides a good
opportunity to modulate the properties and performance of APCN membranes