Molecular Dynamics Investigation of Ion Sorption and
Permeation in Desalination Membranes
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Abstract
With the purpose
of gaining insights into the mechanisms of ion
uptake and permeation in desalination membranes, MD investigation
of a model polyamide membrane was carried out. A relatively large
membrane (45K atoms) was assembled, which closely matched real desalination
membrane in terms of chemistry and water permeability. Simulations
demonstrate that the mechanism of ion uptake distinctly differs from
mean-field approaches assuming a smeared excluding Donnan potential.
Ion sorption on charged sites in the membrane phase appears to be
highly localized, due to electrostatic forces dominating over translational
entropy. Moreover, sorption on partial atomic charges becomes possible
as well, which greatly enhances salt (co-ion) uptake and weakens the
effect of fixed charges on salt exclusion. This could explain high
ion uptake measured in polyamide membranes for both co- and counterions
and variations of ion sorption and permeation at low salt concentrations.
On the other hand, present simulations greatly overestimate ion permeability,
which could be explained by a more open structure than in real membranes,
in which dense polyamide fragments may efficiently block ion permeation.
Unfortunately, MD cannot analyze ion uptake and permeation in dense
fragments containing too few ions, which calls for new approaches
to studying barrier properties of polyamide