Molecular Grafting of Fluorinated and Nonfluorinated
Alkylsiloxanes on Various Ceramic Membrane Surfaces for the Removal
of Volatile Organic Compounds Applying Vacuum Membrane Distillation
posted on 2017-01-26, 00:00authored byJoanna Kujawa, Samer Al-Gharabli, Wojciech Kujawski, Katarzyna Knozowska
Four
main tasks were presented: (i) ceramic membrane functionalization
(TiO2 5 kDa and 300 kDa), (ii) extended material characterization
(physicochemistry and tribology) of pristine and modified ceramic
samples, (iii) evaluation of chemical and mechanical stability, and
finally (iv) assessment of membrane efficiency in vacuum membrane
distillation applied for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) removal
from water. Highly efficient molecular grafting with four types of
perfluoroalkylsilanes and one nonfluorinated agent was developed.
Materials with controllable tribological and physicochemical properties
were achieved. The most meaningful finding is associated with the
applicability of fluorinated and nonfluorinated grafting agents. The
results of contact angle, hysteresis of contact angle, sliding angle,
and critical surface tension as well as Young’s modulus, nanohardness,
and adhesion force for grafting by these two modifiers are comparable.
This provides insight into the potential applicability of environmental
friendly hydrophobic and superhydrophobic surfaces. The achieved hydrophobic
membranes were very effective in the removal of VOCs (butanol, methyl-tert-butyl ether, and ethyl acetate) from binary aqueous
solutions in vacuum membrane distillation. The correlation between
membrane effectiveness and separated solvent polarity was compared
in terms of material properties and resistance to the wetting (kinetics
of wetting and in-depth liquid penetration). Material properties were
interpreted considering Zisman theory and using Kao diagram. The significant
influence of surface chemistry on the membrane performance was noticed
(5 kDa, influence of hydrophobic nanolayer and separation controlled
by solution-diffusion model; 300 kDa, no impact of surface chemistry
and separation controlled by liquid–vapor equilibrium).