3 research outputs found
Electroactive ion exchange membranes based on conducting polymers
Ion exchange membranes are indispensable for the separation of ionic species. They can
discriminate between anions and cations depending on the type of fixed ionic group
present in the membrane. These conventional ion exchange membranes (CIX) have
exceptional ionic conductivity, which is advantageous in various electromembrane
separation processes such as electrodialysis, electrodeionisation and electrochemical ion
exchange. The main disadvantage of CIX membranes is their high electrical resistance
owing to the fact that the membranes are electronically non conductive. An alternative
can be electroactive ion exchange membranes, which are ionically and electronically
conducting. Polypyrrole (PPy) is a type of electroactive ion exchange material as well
as a commonly known conducting polymer. When PPy membranes are repeatedly
reduced and oxidised, ions are pumped through the membrane.
The main aim of this thesis was to develop electroactive cation transport membranes
based on PPy for the selective transport of divalent cations. Membranes developed
composed of PPy films deposited on commercially available support materials. To carry
out this study, cation exchange membranes based on PPy doped with immobile anions
were prepared. Two types of dopant anions known to interact with divalent metal ions
were considered, namely 4-sulphonic calix[6]arene (C6S) and carboxylated multiwalled
carbon nanotubes (CNT). The transport of ions across membranes containing
PPy doped with polystyrene sulphonate (PSS) and PPy doped with para-toluene
sulphonate (pTS) was also studied in order to understand the nature of ion transport and
permeability across PPy(CNT) and PPy(C6S) membranes. In the course of these studies,
membrane characterisation was performed using electrochemical quartz crystal
microbalance (EQCM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Permeability of the
membranes towards divalent cations was explored using a two compartment transport
cell.
EQCM results demonstrated that the ion exchange behaviour of polypyrrole is
dependent on a number of factors including the type of dopant anion present, the type of
ions present in the surrounding medium, the scan rate used during the experiment and
the previous history of the polymer film. The morphology of PPy films was found to
change when the dopant anion was varied and even when the thickness of the film was
altered in some cases. In nearly all cases the permeability of the membranes towards
metal ions followed the order K+ > Ca2+ > Mn2+. The one exception was PPy(C6S), for
which the permeability followed the order Ca2+ ≥ K+ > Mn2+ > Co2+ > Cr3+. The above
permeability sequences show a strong dependence on the size of the metal ions with
metal ions having the smallest hydrated radii exhibiting the highest flux. Another factor
that affected the permeability towards metal ions was the thickness of the PPy films.
Films with the least thickness showed higher metal ion fluxes. Electrochemical control
over ion transport across PPy(CNT) membrane was obtained when films composed of
the latter were deposited on track-etched Nucleopore® membranes as support material.
In contrast, the flux of ions across the same film was concentration gradient dependent
when the polymer was deposited on polyvinylidene difluoride membranes as support
material. However, electrochemical control over metal ion transport was achieved with
a bilayer type of PPy film consisting of PPy(pTS)/PPy(CNT), irrespective of the type of
support material.
In the course of studying macroscopic charge balance during transport experiments
performed using a two compartment transport cell, it was observed that PPy films were
non-permselective. A clear correlation between the change in pH in the receiving
solution and the ions transported across the membrane was observed. A decrease in
solution pH was detected when the polymer membrane acted primarily as an anion
exchanger, while an increase in pH occurred when it functioned as a cation exchanger.
When there was an approximately equal flux of anions and cations across the polymer
membrane, the pH in the receiving solution was in the range 6 - 8. These observations
suggest that macroscopic charge balance during the transport of cations and anions
across polypyrrole membranes was maintained by introduction of anions (OH-) and
cations (H+) produced via electrolysis of water
Electrochemically controlled transport of anions across polypyrrole-based membranes
Electrosynthesized polypyrrole (PPy) films on PVDF/Pt support membranes were used to study electrochemically controlled transport of monovalent and divalent anions across the PPy-based membranes. The PVDF/Pt/PPy membrane separated two compartments in a transport cell and served simultaneously as the working electrode allowing electrochemical switching of PPy between its oxidized and reduced forms during the transport experiments. PPy was electrosynthesized in presence of p-toluene sulfonate, camphorsulfonate and hexafluorofosfate (doping ions) and the ion transport properties of the resulting PPy-based membranes were investigated. The morphology and elemental composition of PPy before and after the anion transport studies were studied by SEM and EDXA. The anion fluxes obtained during transport of a mixture of Cl−, NO3−, SO42− and HAsO42− across the PPy-based membranes were found to decrease in the following order: NO3− > Cl− » SO42− > HAsO42−. PPy films with the same composition as for the transport studies were also electrodeposited on glassy carbon electrodes (GC/PPy) and studied by potentiometry. The potentiometric selectivity of the GC/PPy electrodes towards Cl−, NO3− and SO42− was found to correlate with the ion transport characteristics of the corresponding PPy membranes used in the transport cell. The PPy-based membranes allowed separation of monovalent from divalent anions.Accepted versio