Abstract

Membranes with high water permeance, near-zero rejection to inorganic salts (such as NaCl and Na2SO4), and almost 100% rejection to organic dyes are of great interest for the dye desalination (the separation of dyes and salts) of textile wastewater. Herein, we prepared reduced graphene oxide membranes in a solvation state (S-rGO) with nanochannel sizes rightly between the salt ions and dye molecules. The S-rGO membrane rejects >99.0% of Direct Red 80 (DR 80) and has almost zero rejection for Na2SO4. By contrast, conventional GO or rGO membranes often have channel sizes smaller than divalent ions (such as SO42-) and thus high rejection for Na2SO4. More interestingly, high salinity in typical dye solutions decreases the channel size in the S-rGO membranes and thus increases the dye rejection, while the Na2SO4 rejection decreases because of the negatively charged surface on GO and the salt screening effect. The membranes also show pure water permeance as high as 80 L m-2 h-1 bar-1, which is about 8 times that of commercial NF 90 membrane and 2 times that of a commercial ultrafiltration membrane (with a molecular weight cutoff of 2000 Da), rendering their promise for practical dye desalination.

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