posted on 2021-03-24, 15:37authored byYijun Qian, Jing Shang, Dan Liu, Guoliang Yang, Xungai Wang, Cheng Chen, Liangzhi Kou, Weiwei Lei
Membranes
based on two-dimensional (2D) nanomaterials have shown
great potential to alleviate the worldwide freshwater crisis due to
their outstanding performance of freshwater extraction from saline
water via ion rejection. However, it is still very challenging to
achieve high selectivity and high permeance of water desalination
through precise d-spacing control of 2D nanomaterial
membranes within subnanometer. Here, we developed functionalized graphene
oxide membranes (FGOMs) with nitrogen groups such as amine groups
and polarized nitrogen atoms to enhance metal ion sieving by one-step
controlled plasma processing. The nitrogen functionalities can produce
strong electrostatic interactions with metal ions and result in a
mono/divalent cation selectivity of FGOMs up to 90 and 28.3 in single
and binary solution, which is over 10-fold than that of graphene oxide
membranes (GOMs). First-principles calculation confirms that the ionic
selectivity of FGOMs is induced by the difference of binding energies
between metal ions and polarized nitrogen atoms. Besides, the ultrathin
FGOMs with a thickness of 50 nm can possess a high water flux of up
to 120 mol m–2 h–1 without sacrificing
rejection rates of nearly 99.0% on NaCl solution, showing an ultrahigh
water/salt selectivity of around 4.31 × 103. Such
facile and efficient plasma processing not only endows the GOMs with
a promising future sustainable water purification, including ion separation
and water desalination, but also provides a new strategy to functionalize
2D nanomaterial membranes for specific purposes.