Title of article
Understanding the structure and performance of self-assembled triblock terpolymer membranes
Author/Authors
MaryTheresa M. Pendergast، نويسنده , , Rachel Mika Dorin، نويسنده , , William A. Phillip، نويسنده , , Ulrich Wiesner، نويسنده , , Eric M.V. Hoek، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
8
From page
461
To page
468
Abstract
Nanoporous membranes represent a possible route towards more precise particle and macromolecular separations, which are of interest across many industries. Here, we explored membranes with vertically-aligned nanopores formed from a poly(isoprene-b-styrene-b-4 vinyl pyridine) (ISV) triblock terpolymer via a hybrid self-assembly/nonsolvent induced phase separation process (S-NIPS). ISV concentration, solvent composition, and evaporation time in the S-NIPS process were varied to tailor ordering of the selective layer and produce enhanced water permeability. Here, water permeability was doubled over previous versions of ISV membranes. This was achieved by increasing volatile solvent concentration, thereby decreasing the evaporation period required for self-assembly. Fine-tuning was required, however, since overly-rapid evaporation did not yield the desired pore structure. Transport models, used to relate the in-situ structure to the performance of these materials, revealed narrowing of pores and blocking by the dense region below. It was shown that these vertically aligned nanoporous membranes compare favorably with commercial ultrafiltration membranes formed by NIPS and track-etching processes, which suggests that there is practical value in further developing and optimizing these materials for specific industrial separations.
Keywords
Phase separation , membrane , Ultrafiltration , Block copolymer , Self-assembly
Journal title
Journal of Membrane Science
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Journal of Membrane Science
Record number
1359914
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