Abstract

Mono-valent selective ion-exchange membrane, as the core component of selective electrodialysis (SED), has received extensive attention. In this work, we report a mono-valent selective anion-exchange membrane (AEM), which was fabricated with distorted poly(aryl ether sulfone) and decorated with bifunctional side-chains providing anion exchange groups and hydrophobic segments. By tuning the length of the hydrophobic side-chains, the nanophase separation within AEMs was finely tuned, evidenced by an ionic cluster size of about 0.47 nm from SAXS analysis. The optimized AEM (PAES-TA-7 AEM) shows a very low water swelling ratio of 6.4 %, signaling good dimensional stability. The perm-selectivity (PSO42–Cl–) of PAES-TA-7 AEM during ED reached 107 at 2.5 mA∙cm−2 (ion flux: 2.69 × 10−8 mol cm−2 s−1 at 90 min) significantly exceeding that of the commercial Neosepta ACS (11; 2.08 × 10−8 mol cm−2 s−1). It is inferred that the ion channels, resulting from nanophase separation between the side-chains and the backbone, as well as the free volume cavity created by the distorted backbone, significantly contribute to the smooth transport of the Cl− ions through the AEM with less resistance. As a result, it is believed that this work offers a useful strategy to advance the monovalent anion-selective membranes.

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