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Tailoring the Surface Chemistry of Anion Exchange Membranes with Zwitterions: Toward Antifouling RED Membranes

Authors :
Michel Saakes
Kitty Nijmeijer
Diego Pintossi
Zandrie Borneman
Membrane Materials and Processes
EIRES Eng. for Sustainable Energy Systems
EIRES Chem. for Sustainable Energy Systems
Source :
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 13(15), 18348-18357. American Chemical Society, ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Fouling is a pressing issue for harvesting salinity gradient energy with reverse electrodialysis (RED). In this work, antifouling membranes were fabricated by surface modification of a commercial anion exchange membrane with zwitterionic layers. Either zwitterionic monomers or zwitterionic brushes were applied on the surface. Zwitterionic monomers were grafted to the surface by deposition of a polydopamine layer followed by an aza-Michael reaction with sulfobetaine. Zwitterionic brushes were grafted on the surface by deposition of polydopamine modified with a surface initiator for subsequent atom transfer radical polymerization to obtain polysulfobetaine. As expected, the zwitterionic layers did increase the membrane hydrophilicity. The antifouling behavior of the membranes in RED was evaluated using artificial river and seawater and sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate as the model foulant. The zwitterionic monomers are effective in delaying the fouling onset, but the further build-up of the fouling layer is hardly affected, resulting in similar power density losses as for the unmodified membranes. Membranes modified with zwitterionic brushes show a high potential for application in RED as they not only delay the onset of fouling but they also slow down the growth of the fouling layer, thus retaining higher power density outputs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19448244
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 13(15), 18348-18357. American Chemical Society, ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cf35a992fd3349b31bc2868d98dc0871