Electrospun Pretreatment Membranes

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Description
Managing water resources has become one of the most pressing concerns of scientists both in academia and industry. The reverse osmosis (RO) water treatment process is a well-researched technology among the pressure driven processes to produce potable water. RO is

Managing water resources has become one of the most pressing concerns of scientists both in academia and industry. The reverse osmosis (RO) water treatment process is a well-researched technology among the pressure driven processes to produce potable water. RO is an energy intensive process and often RO membranes are susceptible to fouling and scaling that drives up operational cost and hinder the efficiency. To increase the performance of RO membranes the feed water is pretreated to remove pollutants before desalination. This work aims to fabricate pretreatment membranes to prevent the effects of fouling and scaling by introducing hydrophilic character to membrane. This work explores electrospinning, a cost-effective and scalable technique, to blend two polymers into a nonwoven membrane comprised of fibers ~100 nm - 10 µm in diameter.

A rotary drum collector holding the mat was used to simultaneously collect the electrospun hydrophobic poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) and hydrophilic poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) fibers from two separate solutions. The hydrophilicity of the resulting membrane was tuned by controlling the relative deposition rate of PVA onto the co-spun mat. Fiber diameter and morphologies were characterized by scanning electron microscopy, and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and Confocal fluorescence microscopy further confirmed the presence of both polymers. Moreover, a rigorous analysis to map the PVA/PVC concentration was established to accurately report the relative concentrations of the two polymers on the co-spun mat. After electrospinning, the PVA in the co-spun mats were cross-linked with poly(ethylene glycol) diacid to impart mechanical strength and tune the porosity.

EDS analysis revealed inconsistencies in the mass deposition of both polymers suggesting an improvement in the current experimental design to establish a meaningful relationship between PVA concentration and hydrophilicity. However, tensile test revealed that co-spun mats with high mass flow ratios of PVA possessed high mechanical strength showing a significant improvement in the Young’s Modulus. Furthermore, the co-spun mats were challenged with filtration experiments expecting a positive correlation of flux with PVA concentration. But it was found that with increased concentration, crosslinked PVA constricted PVC fibers minimizing the pores causing a lower flux and a dense membrane structure suitable for filtration.