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Thermal Vapor Deposition of a Hydrophobic and Gas-Permeable Membrane on Zirconium Phosphate Cation Exchanger: An Oral Sorbent for the Urea Removal of Kidney Failure.

Yihan SongSang-Ho YeStephen R AshLei Li
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2024)
An oral sorbent with high capacity for NH 4 + is desirable in lowering the blood urea level and mitigating the dialysis burden for end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) patients. Zirconium phosphate (ZrP) is an amorphous cation ion exchanger with high NH 4 + binding capacity as a sorbent material, but its selectivity to remove NH 4 + is limited in the presence of other competing ions in water solution. We previously have developed a gas-permeable and hydrophobic perfluorocarbon coating on ZrP, which improves ZrP's NH 4 + selectivity. However, the coating preparation procedure, a wet chemistry approach, is complicated and time-consuming, and more importantly, the large amount of usage of acetone poses a concern for the application of ZrP as an oral sorbent. In this study, we developed a solventless coating protocol that effectively coats ZrP with tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) and 1 H ,1 H ,2 H ,2 H -perfluorooctyltriethoxysilane (FOTS) via thermal vapor deposition (TVD) in a simplified manner. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and contact angle measurements verify the two coatings are successfully deposited on the ZrP surface, and the coating condition was optimized based on an in vitro static binding study. The dynamic binding study of competing ions on Na-loaded ZrP with TVD coatings yields a maximum NH 4 + removal (∼3.2 mequiv/g), which can be improved to ∼4.7 mequiv/g if H-loaded ZrP under the same coating condition is used in basic stock solutions. More importantly, both materials barely remove Ca 2+ and show excellent acid resistance. The significant improvement in the NH 4 + binding capacity and selectivity reported here establishes a highly promising surface modification approach to optimize oral sorbents for ESKD patients.
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