Abstract

The implementation of hydrophobicity on membranes is becoming crucial in current membrane technological development, especially in membrane gas absorption (MGA). In order to prevent membrane wetting, a polypropylene (PP) dense layer coating was deposited on a commercial poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) hollow fiber membrane as a method of enhancing surface hydrophobicity. The weight concentration of PP pellets was varied from 10 mg mL−1 to 40 mg mL−1 and dissolved in xylene. A two-step dip coating was implemented where the PVDF membrane was immersed in a non-solvent followed by a polymer coating solution. The effects of the modified membrane with the non-solvent methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) and without the non–solvent was investigated over all weight concentrations of the coating solution. The SEM investigation found that the modified membrane surface transfiguration formed microspherulites that intensified as PP concentration increased with and without MEK. To understand the coating formation further, the solvent–non-solvent compatibility with the polymer was also discussed in this study. The membrane characterizations on the porosity, the contact angle, and the FTIR spectra were also conducted in determining the polymer coating properties. Hydrophobic membrane was achieved up to 119.85° contact angle and peak porosity of 87.62% using MEK as the non-solvent 40 mg mL−1 PP concentration. The objective of the current manuscript was to test the hydrophobicity and wetting degree of the coating layer. Hence, physical absorption via the membrane contactor using CO2 as the feed gas was carried out. The maximum CO2 flux of 3.33 × 10−4 mol m−2 s−1 was achieved by 25 mg modified membrane at a fixed absorbent flow rate of 100 mL min−1 while 40 mg modified membrane showed better overall flux stability.

Highlights

  • The fabrications of highly hydrophobic membranes are not uncommon in current membrane technology advancement

  • The results showed an alteration of the modified membrane surface roughness, exhibiting 12.2 times higher Root Mean Square (Rms ) value as compared to pristine membrane conditions

  • This study aimed to investigate the PP coating solution compatibility with commercial poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) hollow fiber membranes using methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) as a non-solvent

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Summary

Introduction

The fabrications of highly hydrophobic membranes are not uncommon in current membrane technology advancement. Liquid-to-gas contact applications such as membrane gas absorption (MGA) or membrane distillation (MD) utilize this type of membrane to maintain high performance at long periods of operations [1,2,3]. This is because in longer operations, membranes used tend to get extremely wetted due to long exposure to absorbents used [4,5]. Membrane wetting is a common cause for the disruption of separation performance due to the intrusion of liquid absorbents into the membrane’s pores [6] This phenomenon can be prevented by focusing on improving the membrane’s hydrophobicity. The implementation of high hydrophobicity or superhydrophobic (contact angle: >150◦ ) on membranes to attain low surface free energy has become a requirement [8]

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