All-Polymer and Self-Roughened Superhydrophobic PVDF Fibrous Membranes for Stably Concentrating Seawater by Membrane Distillation.

2021 
Novel specially wettable membranes have been attracting significant attention for durable membrane distillation (MD). However, constructing a superhydrophobic interface often has to undergo complex modification procedures including roughness construction and hydrophobic modification. Herein, all-polymer and self-roughened superhydrophobic poly(vinylidene fluoride) fibrous membranes (PVDF FMs) with robustly stable pores were successfully constructed via electrospinning of fluorinated polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxanes/PVDF (F-POSS/PVDF) emulsion solution in combination with hot-pressing. The comparative experiment reveals that proper hot-pressing, including adequate temperature and pressure, can help improve membrane pore stability by welding the intersecting fibers and increase the membrane surface hydrophobicity by transferring the inner fluorine chains to the outer fiber surface, simultaneously advancing membrane scaling and fouling resistance. Nevertheless, excessive temperature or pressure will destroy the interconnected pores and surface wettability of the PVDF FM. Significantly, the hot-pressing-treated F-POSS/PVDF FM shows a high water recovery (∼90%) and robust stability after five rounds of the concentration process toward concentrating natural seawater as a target. Thus, the all-polymer and self-roughened superhydrophobic PVDF FMs constructed via electrospinning combined with the thermal treatment have potential applications in concentrating hypersaline brines, which make up for the other membrane technology, including reverse osmosis and nanofiltration technologies that failed to concentrate hypersaline solutions.
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