Abstract

Reverse osmosis (RO) is a crucial process for treating waters across various salinity levels, but membrane fouling persists as an inherent challenge. While surface modification with hydrophilic polymers such as polyethylene glycol (PEG) and its derivatives is a prevailing strategy to alleviate fouling, its effectiveness has primarily been explored in low-salinity conditions, leaving a critical knowledge gap regarding the performance of such membranes in high-salinity environments and their susceptibility to feed salinity variations. We here investigated the antifouling characteristics of PEG-modified RO membranes for high-salinity wastewater and seawater treatment. Remarkably, our findings indicated a substantial decrease in fouling resistance under high-salinity conditions compared to low-salinity wastewaters used as control. The reduction in Lewis acid-base interactions, induced by decreased water structuring, was found to be a critical factor for the diminished fouling resistance based on the Extended Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (XDLVO) analysis. Complementary experimental and theoretical studies unveiled the disruptive role of high-concentration NaCl on PEG-water hydrogen bonds, causing PEG dehydration and configurational compression, which thus compromised the enthalpic barrier and entropic repulsion against fouling. Our study emphasizes the pivotal role of feed salinity in determining the fouling resistance of membranes modified with hydrophilic polymers, a factor often neglected in prior research.

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