Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
145433 Chemical Engineering Journal 2016 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•PTFE membrane is modified with ZIF-8 MOF for adsorption of micropollutants.•Membrane characterization before and after particles incorporation is done.•Adsorption properties are measured using progesterone as a model pollutant.•The modification increased adsorption by ∼40% and almost doubled permeability.•A model is presented that described adsorption characteristics adequately.

A polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) double layer microfiltration membrane has been modified with zeolite imidazolate metal organic frameworks-8 (ZIF-8) and tested for micropollutants removal from water. The physical properties of the modified membrane and its removal characteristics are tested using progesterone as a model pollutant. Compared to the unmodified membrane, incorporation of ZIF-8 onto the polymer matrix resulted in close to 40% increase in the membrane adsorption capacity and almost doubling its water permeability which could result in significant reduction in processing specific energy consumption. The membrane maintained near 95% of its original removal efficiency after three regeneration cycles using polyethylene glycol-400. Modeling of the adsorption results agreed satisfactorily with the experimental measurements. The synergy provided by using ZIF-8 particles and the significant regeneration volume reduction ratio demonstrates the effectiveness of the approach for increasing the overall micropollutants removal capacity and allows for its further consideration for development of viable continuous membrane adsorption techniques for decontamination of water resources.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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