3 research outputs found
Partitioning of Alkali Metal Salts and Boric Acid from Aqueous Phase into the Polyamide Active Layers of Reverse Osmosis Membranes
The
partition coefficient of solutes into the polyamide active
layer of reverse osmosis (RO) membranes is one of the three membrane
properties (together with solute diffusion coefficient and active
layer thickness) that determine solute permeation. However, no well-established
method exists to measure solute partition coefficients into polyamide
active layers. Further, the few studies that measured partition coefficients
for inorganic salts report values significantly higher than one (∼3–8),
which is contrary to expectations from Donnan theory and the observed
high rejection of salts. As such, we developed a benchtop method to
determine solute partition coefficients into the polyamide active
layers of RO membranes. The method uses a quartz crystal microbalance
(QCM) to measure the change in the mass of the active layer caused
by the uptake of the partitioned solutes. The method was evaluated
using several inorganic salts (alkali metal salts of chloride) and
a weak acid of common concern in water desalination (boric acid).
All partition coefficients were found to be lower than 1, in general
agreement with expectations from Donnan theory. Results reported in
this study advance the fundamental understanding of contaminant transport
through RO membranes, and can be used in future studies to decouple
the contributions of contaminant partitioning and diffusion to contaminant
permeation
Unifying the Conversation: Membrane Separation Performance in Energy, Water, and Industrial Applications
Dense polymer membranes
enable a diverse range of separations
and
clean energy technologies, including gas separation, water treatment,
and renewable fuel production or conversion. The transport of small
molecular and ionic solutes in the majority of these membranes is
described by the same solution-diffusion mechanism, yet a comparison
of membrane separation performance across applications is rare. A
better understanding of how structure–property relationships
and driving forces compare among applications would drive innovation
in membrane development by identifying opportunities for cross-disciplinary
knowledge transfer. Here, we aim to inspire such cross-pollination
by evaluating the selectivity and electrochemical driving forces for
29 separations across nine different applications using a common framework
grounded in the physicochemical characteristics of the permeating
and rejected solutes. Our analysis shows that highly selective membranes
usually exhibit high solute rejection, rather than fast solute permeation,
and often exploit contrasts in the size and charge of solutes rather
than a nonelectrostatic chemical property, polarizability. We also
highlight the power of selective driving forces (e.g., the fact that
applied electric potential acts on charged solutes but not on neutral
ones) to enable effective separation processes, even when the membrane
itself has poor selectivity. We conclude by proposing several research
opportunities that are likely to impact multiple areas of membrane
science. The high-level perspective of membrane separation across
fields presented herein aims to promote cross-pollination and innovation
by enabling comparisons of solute transport and driving forces among
membrane separation applications
Unifying the Conversation: Membrane Separation Performance in Energy, Water, and Industrial Applications
Dense polymer membranes
enable a diverse range of separations
and
clean energy technologies, including gas separation, water treatment,
and renewable fuel production or conversion. The transport of small
molecular and ionic solutes in the majority of these membranes is
described by the same solution-diffusion mechanism, yet a comparison
of membrane separation performance across applications is rare. A
better understanding of how structure–property relationships
and driving forces compare among applications would drive innovation
in membrane development by identifying opportunities for cross-disciplinary
knowledge transfer. Here, we aim to inspire such cross-pollination
by evaluating the selectivity and electrochemical driving forces for
29 separations across nine different applications using a common framework
grounded in the physicochemical characteristics of the permeating
and rejected solutes. Our analysis shows that highly selective membranes
usually exhibit high solute rejection, rather than fast solute permeation,
and often exploit contrasts in the size and charge of solutes rather
than a nonelectrostatic chemical property, polarizability. We also
highlight the power of selective driving forces (e.g., the fact that
applied electric potential acts on charged solutes but not on neutral
ones) to enable effective separation processes, even when the membrane
itself has poor selectivity. We conclude by proposing several research
opportunities that are likely to impact multiple areas of membrane
science. The high-level perspective of membrane separation across
fields presented herein aims to promote cross-pollination and innovation
by enabling comparisons of solute transport and driving forces among
membrane separation applications