Abstract

Electrically-driven membrane technology plays a crucial role in water treatment and purification, finding applications in various fields like saline water and wastewater desalination, saline concentration and wastewater recycling. The content of this study is based on dually cross-linking and hot-pressing on a PVDF blend, to fabricate a kind of anion exchange membranes (AEMs) having semi-interpenetrating network and thus improve the defect of the traditional heterogeneous AEMs. The research explores the impact of vinyl imidazole (VIM) and dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate (DMAEMA) monomers, primarily or dually cross-linking, and optimizes the membrane properties through a hot-pressing process. Under these optimized conditions, the resulting membranes exhibit robust mechanical properties and outstanding desalination capabilities, achieving an area resistance of 2.56 Ω cm2 (comparable to standard homogeneous membranes), a desalination rate of 97.26% (outperforming the Neosepta AMX: 76.90%), and a salt limiting concentration of 3.1 M (surpassing the heterogeneous AEM and Neosepta AMX). Notably, this synthesis method is characterized by its cheap raw material and low energy consumption. This research offers valuable insights for the advancement and large-scale implementation of anion exchange membrane desalination.

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