Abstract
Membrane technology holds great potential for separation applications and also finds critical needs in biomedical fields, such as blood oxygenation. However, the bottlenecks in gas permeation, plasma leakage, and especially hemocompatibility hamper the development of membrane oxygenation. It remains extremely challenging to design efficient membranes and elucidate underlying principles. In this study, we report biomimetic decoration of asymmetric nanoporous membranes by ultrathin FeIII-tannic acid metal–ligand networks to realize fast gas exchange with on plasma leakage and substantially enhance hemocompatibility. Because the intrinsic nanopores facilitate gas permeability and the FeIII-catechol layers enable superior hydrophilicity and electronegativity to original surfaces, the modified membranes exhibit high transport properties for gases and great resistances to protein adsorption, platelet activation, coagulation, thrombosis, and hemolysis. Molecular docking and density functional theory simulations indicate that more preferential adsorption of metal–ligand networks with water molecules than proteins is critical to anticoagulation. Moreover, benefiting from the better antiaging property gave by biomimetic decoration, the membranes after four-month aging present gas permeances similar to or even larger than those of pristine ones, despite the initial permeation decline. Importantly, for blood oxygenation, the designed membranes after aging show fast O2 and CO2 exchange processes with rates up to 28–17 and 97–47 mL m−2 min−1, respectively, accompanied with no detectable thrombus and plasma leakage. We envisage that the biomimetic decoration of nanoporous membranes provide a feasible route to achieve great biocompatibility and transport capability for various applications.
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