Abstract

A facile approach to fabricate antibiofouling membrane was developed by grafting quaternary ammonium compounds (QACs) onto polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) membrane via surface-initiated activators regenerated by electron transfer atom-transfer radical-polymerization (ARGET ATRP) method. During the modification process, a hydrophilic silica nanoparticle layer was also immobilized onto the membrane surface as an interlayer through silicification reaction for QAC grafting, which imparted the membrane with favorable surface properties (e.g., hydrophilic and negatively charged surface). The QAC-modified membrane (MQ) showed significantly improved hydrophilicity and permeability mainly due to the introduction of silica nanoparticles and exposure of hydrophilic quaternary ammonium groups instead of long alkyl chains. Furthermore, the coverage of QAC onto membrane surface enabled MQ membrane to have clear antibacterial effect, with an inhibition rate ~99.9% of Escherichia coli (Gram-negative) and Staphylococcus aureus (Gram-positive), respectively. According to the batch filtration test, MQ had better antibiofouling performance compared to the control membrane, which was ascribed to enhanced hydrophilicity and antibacterial activity. Furthermore, the MQ membrane also exhibited impressive stability of QAC upon suffering repeated fouling–cleaning tests. The modification protocols provide a new robust way to fabricate high-performance antibiofouling QAC-based membranes for wastewater treatment.

Highlights

  • Membrane technology has been used extensively in water and wastewater treatment

  • The chemical compositions of the membrane surface were analyzed by XPS

  • A hydrophilic silica nanoparticle layer was immobilized onto the membrane surface as an interlayer through silicification reaction for quaternary ammonium compounds (QACs) grafting, imparted membrane with favorable surface properties

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Summary

Introduction

Membrane technology has been used extensively in water and wastewater treatment. Remains a tough issue that severely hinders its further application [1,2]. Common biofouling control strategies include feed solution pretreatment [6], membrane cleaning [7,8]. Membrane modification [9,10,11]. Fabrication of antibiofouling membrane has been actively pursued due to its high-efficiency and cost-saving properties. Various strategies of membrane modification have emerged for construction of antibiofouling surfaces. They can be classified into passive and active methods [12]

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