Vapor/Vapor-Solid Interfacial Growth of Covalent Organic Framework Membranes on Alumina Hollow Fiber for Advanced Molecular Separation.
Wei Jian Samuel SiowJeng Yi ChongJia Hui OngMarkus KraftRong WangRong XuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Covalent organic frameworks (COFs), known for their chemical stability and porous crystalline structure, hold promises as advanced separation membranes. However, fabricating high-quality COF membranes, particularly on industrial-preferred hollow fiber substrates, remains challenging. This study introduces a novel vapor/vapor-solid (V/V-S) method for growing ultrathin crystalline TpPa-1 COF membranes on the inner lumen surface of alumina hollow fibers (TpPa-1/Alumina). Through vapor-phase monomer introduction onto polydopamine-modified alumina at 170 °C and 1 atm, efficient polymerization and crystallization occur at the confined V-S interface. This enables one-step growth within 8 h, producing 100 nm thick COF membranes with strong substrate adhesion. TpPa-1/Alumina exhibits exceptional stability and performance over 80 h in continuous cross-flow organic solvent nanofiltration (OSN), with methanol permeance of about 200 L m -2 h -1 bar -1 and dye rejection with molecular weight cutoff (MWCO) of approximately 700 Da. Moreover, the versatile V/V-S method synthesizes two additional COF membranes (TpPa2Cl/Alumina and TpHz/Alumina) with different pore sizes and chemical environments. Adjusting the COF membrane thickness between 100-500 nm is achievable easily by varying the growth cycle numbers. Notably, TpPa2Cl/Alumina demonstrates excellent OSN performance in separating the model active pharmaceutical ingredient glycyrrhizic acid (GA) from dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), highlighting the method's potential for large-scale industrial applications.
Keyphrases
- metal organic framework
- molecularly imprinted
- heavy metals
- photodynamic therapy
- dna damage
- escherichia coli
- ionic liquid
- pet ct
- room temperature
- mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography
- cystic fibrosis
- water soluble
- risk assessment
- biofilm formation
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- carbon dioxide
- structural basis
- tandem mass spectrometry