Abstract

Nanofiltration membrane performance is enhanced to attain an economical water purification system. Herein, we developed a series of high-performance thin-film composite nanofiltration polyamide (PA) membranes by incorporating different monoamines containing carboxylic terminal groups such as 4-aminobenzoic acid (ABA), 6-aminocaproic acid (ACA), and 3-aminopropanoic acid (APA). Each monoamine was added to an aqueous piperazine (PIP) solution, which was reacted with trimesoyl chloride through interfacial polymerization on a porous polysulfone support. The chemical structures and compositions of the obtained membranes were characterized using attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared and x-ray photoelectron spectrometry. The PA membranes were measured for their contact angle and streaming potential. Both the membrane hydrophilic property and surface charge density were enhanced as a result of introducing carboxylic monoamines. The membrane separation performance was tailored by adjusting the monoamine structure and content. The pure water flux of the membranes increased in the following order: PAM < PAM-APA < PAM-ACA < PAM-ABA. PAM-ABA demonstrated the optimum nanofiltration performance – ABA:PIP = 5:5 (w/w); water flux, JH2O = 71.2Lm−2h−1; salt rejections: RNa2SO4 = 93.2% and RNaCl = 15.6% (for 1000ppm aqueous salt solution, operating at 0.6MPa and 25 °C). Moreover, PAM-ABA delivered stable performance at various operating conditions and exhibited excellent antifouling properties.

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