Login / Signup

Hydrophilicity gradient in covalent organic frameworks for membrane distillation.

Shuang ZhaoChenghao JiangJingcun FanShanshan HongPei MeiRuxin YaoYilin LiuSule ZhangHui LiHuaqian ZhangChao SunZhenbin GuoPengpeng ShaoYuhao ZhuJinwei ZhangLinshuo GuoYanhang MaJianqi ZhangXiao FengFeng-Chao WangHengan WuBo Wang
Published in: Nature materials (2021)
Desalination can help to alleviate the fresh-water crisis facing the world. Thermally driven membrane distillation is a promising way to purify water from a variety of saline and polluted sources by utilizing low-grade heat. However, membrane distillation membranes suffer from limited permeance and wetting owing to the lack of precise structural control. Here, we report a strategy to fabricate membrane distillation membranes composed of vertically aligned channels with a hydrophilicity gradient by engineering defects in covalent organic framework films by the removal of imine bonds. Such functional variation in individual channels enables a selective water transport pathway and a precise liquid-vapour phase change interface. In addition to having anti-fouling and anti-wetting capability, the covalent organic framework membrane on a supporting layer shows a flux of 600 l m-2 h-1 with 85 °C feed at 16 kPa absolute pressure, which is nearly triple that of the state-of-the-art membrane distillation membrane for desalination. Our results may promote the development of gradient membranes for molecular sieving.
Keyphrases
  • low grade
  • public health
  • high grade
  • drinking water
  • heavy metals
  • heat stress