Template-Particle
Stabilized Bicontinuous Emulsion
Yielding Controlled Assembly of Hierarchical High-Flux Filtration
Membranes
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Abstract
A novel solvent-evaporation-based
process that exploits template-particle
stabilized bicontinuous emulsions for the formation of previously
unreached membrane morphologies is reported in this article. Porous
membranes have a wide range of applications spanning from water filtration,
pharmaceutical purification, and battery separators to scaffolds for
tissue engineering. Different situations require different membrane
morphologies including various pore sizes and pore gradients. However,
most of the previously reported membrane preparation procedures are
restricted to specific morphologies and morphology alterations require
an extensive optimization process. The tertiary system presented in
this article, which consists of a poly(ether sulfone)/dimethylacetamide
(PES/DMAc) solution, glycerol, and ZnO-nanoparticles, allows simple
and exact tuning of pore diameters ranging from sub-20 nm, up to 100
nm. At the same time, the pore size gradient is controlled from 0
up to 840%/μm yielding extreme asymmetry. In addition to structural
analysis, water flux rates of over 5600 L m<sup>–2</sup> h<sup>–1</sup> are measured for membranes retaining 45 nm silica
beads