Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
637270 | Journal of Membrane Science | 2009 | 10 Pages |
This paper aims to study the structure–property relationship and make several reasonable suggestions for tailoring special separation performance and surface properties of thin-film composite polyamide membranes. In the experiments, composite membranes of different thin films with small structural differences were prepared through interfacial polymerization of trimesoyl chloride (TMC), 5-isocyanato-isophthaloyl chloride (ICIC), and 5-chloroformyloxy-isophthaloyl chloride (CFIC) with m-phenylenediamine (MPD) separately, after which their reverse osmosis performances were evaluated by permeation experiment with salt aqueous solution, and film properties were characterized by AFM, SEM, XPS, ATR-IR, contact angle and streaming potential measurements. Chlorine stability was also studied through the evaluation of membrane performance before and after hypochlorite exposure. The results show that the polyacyl chloride structure strongly influences the reverse osmosis performance, surface properties and chlorine stability of the composite membranes; that the introduction of isocyanato group into polyacyl chloride improves the hydrophilicity, water permeability and surface smoothness of the thin-film composite membrane, and increases the absolute value of zeta potential at both low and high pH, but reduces the chlorine stability; and that the introduction of chloroformyloxy group increases the salt rejection rate and the surface roughness of the composite membrane, but lowers the water permeability.