Polyamide nanofiltration membrane with highly uniform sub-nanometre pores for sub-1 Å precision separation

Yuanzhe Liang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yu Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Cheng Liu(Soochow University), Kueir‐Rarn Lee(Chung Yuan Christian University), Wei‐Song Hung(Chung Yuan Christian University), Zhenyi Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Youyong Li(Soochow University), Menachem Elimelech(Yale University), Jian Jin(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shihong Lin(Vanderbilt University)
Nature Communications
April 24, 2020
Cited by 844Open Access
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Abstract

Separating molecules or ions with sub-Angstrom scale precision is important but technically challenging. Achieving such a precise separation using membranes requires Angstrom scale pores with a high level of pore size uniformity. Herein, we demonstrate that precise solute-solute separation can be achieved using polyamide membranes formed via surfactant-assembly regulated interfacial polymerization (SARIP). The dynamic, self-assembled network of surfactants facilitates faster and more homogeneous diffusion of amine monomers across the water/hexane interface during interfacial polymerization, thereby forming a polyamide active layer with more uniform sub-nanometre pores compared to those formed via conventional interfacial polymerization. The polyamide membrane formed by SARIP exhibits highly size-dependent sieving of solutes, yielding a step-wise transition from low rejection to near-perfect rejection over a solute size range smaller than half Angstrom. SARIP represents an approach for the scalable fabrication of ultra-selective membranes with uniform nanopores for precise separation of ions and small solutes.


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