Scalable Graphene Oxide Hollow Fiber Membranes for Dye Desalination Enabled by Multi-Purpose Polyamine Functionalization.
Ameya Manoj TandelManas AgarwalErda DengLingxiang ZhuKaleb FriedmanMiao YuChong ChengHaiqing LinPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
2D nanosheets such as graphene oxide (GO) can be stacked to construct membranes with fine-tuned nanochannels to achieve molecular sieving ability. These membranes are often thin to achieve high water permeance, but their fabrication with consistent nanostructures on a large scale presents an enormous challenge. Herein, GO-based hollow fiber membranes (HFMs) are developed for dye desalination by synergistically combining chemical etching to form in-plane nanopores (10-30 nm) to increase water permeance and polyamine functionalization to improve underwater stability and enable facile large-scale production using existing membrane manufacturing processes. HFM modules with areas of 88 cm 2 and GO layer thicknesses of ≈500 nm are fabricated, and they exhibited a stable dye water permeance of 75 L m -2 h -1 bar -1 , rejection of >99.5% for Direct red and Congo red, and Na 2 SO 4 /dye separation factor of 300-500, superior to state-of-the-art commercial membranes. The versatility of this approach is also demonstrated using different short polyamines and porous substrates. This study reveals a scalable way of designing 2D materials into high-performance robust membranes for practical applications.