Abstract

A tertiary polyamide membrane was synthesized using N,N'-dimethyl-m-phenylenediamine. The durability of this membrane to chlorination by hypochlorite treatment followed by sodium hydroxide treatment was examined, and then deterioration mechanisms were proposed. The tertiary polyamide membrane demonstrated better durability to free chlorine than a conventional secondary polyamide one; however, the former was deteriorated by hypochlorite for 24 h at 2000 ppm of free chlorine below pH 7.5. The salt rejection and permeation performance of the membrane were almost unchanged, and the least chlorination of the active layer occurred during hypochlorite treatment at pH 10. These results indicated that hypochlorous acid rather than hypochlorite ion was the free chlorine species that induced membrane deterioration. The deterioration became severe as chlorination progressed, resulting in collapse of the active layer below pH 7.5. Chlorination and hydrolysis of the model tertiary amide N-methylbenzanilide and Fourier transfer infrared spectroscopy of a deteriorated membrane showed that chlorination of the tertiary polyamide occurred via direct chlorination of the benzene bound to the amidic nitrogen. Silver ion probing of the deteriorated membrane revealed that amide bond scission occurred in the active layer, which might be related to the electron deficiency of the amidic nitrogen caused by chlorination of its benzene ring.

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