Abstract

Two models of hydrophobic ion exchange membranes were examined theoretically with regard to the characteristics of cellulose acetate-nitrate membranes saturated with hydrophobic solvents. The first model, consisting of fixed negative sites dispersed in a homogeneous medium of low dielectric constant, was shown to be invalid for the experimental membranes. The second model, consisting of fixed negative sites in an aqueous channel surrounded by a medium of low dielectric constant, explains many properties of the cellulose acetate-nitrate hydrophobic membranes and was analyzed in some detail. Organic cations can enter the membranes through the hydrophobic phase as well as through the aqueous channels. The mechanism of counterion movement in such a model is assumed to consist of exchange of vacancies and or double-occupied sites positions. The presence of the medium of low dielectric constant around the aqueous channel increases the "self"-energy of the ions in the channel and the electrostatic interaction between a fixed site and a counterion in the membrane. Both these factors can account for the marked dependence of ion mobility in the aqueous channels on the dielectric constant of the surrounding medium. The model predicts membrane preference for monovalent counterions over divalent ones.

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