Ultrahigh pressure compaction-resistant thin film crosslinked composite reverse osmosis membranes

Abstract In this study, we present a class of thin-film crosslinked (TFX) composite reverse osmosis (RO) membranes that resist physical compaction at ultrahigh pressures (up to 200 bar). Since RO membranes experience compaction at virtually all pressure ranges, the ability to resist compaction has w...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature Communications
Main Authors: Jishan Wu, Javier A. Quezada-Renteria, Jinlong He, Minhao Xiao, Yuanmiaoliang Chen, Hanqing Fan, Xinyi Wang, Fiona Chen, Kevin Pataroque, Yara Suleiman, Sina Shahbazmohamadi, N. A. Sreejith, Hariswaran Sitaraman, Marc Day, Ying Li, David Jassby, Jeffrey R. McCutcheon, Menachem Elimelech, Eric M. V. Hoek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-09-01
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-63639-0
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Summary:Abstract In this study, we present a class of thin-film crosslinked (TFX) composite reverse osmosis (RO) membranes that resist physical compaction at ultrahigh pressures (up to 200 bar). Since RO membranes experience compaction at virtually all pressure ranges, the ability to resist compaction has widespread implications for RO membrane technology. The process described herein involves crosslinking a phase inverted porous polyimide (PI) support membrane followed by interfacial polymerization of a polyamide layer, thereby forming a fully thermoset composite membrane structure. We explore a range of phase inversion membrane formation parameters such as PI concentration, solvent-cosolvent ratios, coagulation bath composition, and crosslinking methods in addition to interfacial polymerization reaction chemistry and conditions. Overall, TFX membranes exhibit significantly less compaction compared to hand-cast and commercial high-pressure RO membranes, experiencing less than 10% decline in water permeance and maintaining salt rejection over 99% for NaCl solutions up to 180,000 mg/L with 200 bar applied pressure.
ISSN:2041-1723