Abstract

AbstractHerein, we report an asymmetric alicyclic polyamide nanofilm with an enhanced pore interconnectivity established by manipulating the molecular geometric structure, composed of a porous aromatic polyamide dendrimer layer and a dense alicyclic polyamide layer with hollow stripes. The experimental and simulated data demonstrate that the alicyclic polyamide nanofilm with an asymmetric structure exhibits a negative surface charge and contains more interconnected voids ranging from 1.95 to 3.0 Å, which facilitates the rejection of SO42−with a higher charge density and the passage of Cl−with a smaller hydrated radius, resulting in a good Cl−/SO42−separation selectivity. The resulting membrane attains a 197.11 separation selectivity for Cl−and SO42−and a water flux (for Na2SO4) ~2.2 times that of the pristine polyamide membrane. This fine‐tuning pore approach resulting from the considered alicyclic structure can also be employed in other separation membranes, such as membranes for gas, solvent, or neutral molecular separation.

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