Abstract

Nanofiltration (NF) is considered a competitive technique for acidic stream treatments. However, poorly reactive acid-resistant monomers normally cause thick and uneven separation layers with ultra-low permeability. Herein, catalyst-anchored secondary polymerization is employed after the interfacial polymerization (IP) reaction between trimesoyl chloride (TMC) and 3-aminobenzenesulfonamide (ABSA) to fabricate an extremely acid-resistant NF membrane. Acylation catalysts in ethanol are grafted on the nascent layer by reacting with residual acyl chloride groups to enhance the monomer reactivity, while the ethanol-induced nascent layer structure regulation greatly improves the surface uniformity. Benefiting from the improved self-inhibition effect and optimized phase integrity of the modified IP process, the resulting acid-resistant membrane has unprecedented water permeance (up to 31.4 Lm−2h−1bar−1), desirable Na2SO4 rejection (92.8%), high dye/H+ selectivity and impressive acid stability (20 wt% of H2SO4 for 50 days), outperforming almost all advanced acid-resistant NF membranes. Our work provides a versatile approach for the synthesis of high-performance specialty membranes.

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