Abstract
Layer-by-layer (LbL) assembly of the alternating adsorption of oppositely charged polyions is an extensively studied method to produce nanofiltration membranes. In this work, the concept of chaotropicity of the polycation and its counterion is introduced in the LbL field. In general, the more chaotropic a polyion, the lower its effective charge, charge availability, and hydrophilicity. Here, this is researched for the well-known PDADMAC (polydiallyldimethylammonium chloride) and PAH (poly(allylamine) hydrochloride), and the synthesized PAMA (polyallylmultimethylammonium), with two different counterions (I- and Cl-). Higher chaotropicity (PDADMAC > PAMA-I > PAMA-Cl > PAH) translates into a reduced charge availability and a more pronounced extrinsic charge compensation, resulting in more mass adsorption and a higher pure water permeability. PAMA-containing membranes show the most interesting results in the series. Due to its molecular structure, the chaotropicity of this polycation perfectly lies between PDADMAC and PAH. Overall, the chaotropicity of PAMA membranes allows for the formation of the right balance between extrinsic and intrinsic charge compensation with PSS. Moreover, modifying the nature of the counterions of PAMA (I- or Cl-) allows to tune the density of the multilayer and results in lower size exclusion abilities with PAMA-I compared to PAMA-Cl (higher MWCO and lower MgSO4 retention). In general, the contextualization of the polyion interaction within the specific (poly)ion effects expands the understanding of the influence of the charge density of polycations without ignoring the chemical nature of the functional groups in their monomer units.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 2032-2042 |
Journal | ACS Applied Polymer Materials |
Volume | 5 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 10 Mar 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:This research was part of the research program START-UP with project number 740.018.005 as well as the research program LIFT with project number ENPPS.LIFT.019.023, which is (partly) financed by the Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). Pentair X-Flow is acknowledged for the financial support, and the authors want to thank Magda Avramescu and Johannes Kamp (Pentair X-Flow) for the fruitful discussions and the fruitful collaboration. The authors want to thank Tijn van de Kerkhof from the Eindhoven University of Technology for the preparation and characterization of the PAH/PSS and PDADMAC/PSS membranes.
Funding
This research was part of the research program START-UP with project number 740.018.005 as well as the research program LIFT with project number ENPPS.LIFT.019.023, which is (partly) financed by the Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). Pentair X-Flow is acknowledged for the financial support, and the authors want to thank Magda Avramescu and Johannes Kamp (Pentair X-Flow) for the fruitful discussions and the fruitful collaboration. The authors want to thank Tijn van de Kerkhof from the Eindhoven University of Technology for the preparation and characterization of the PAH/PSS and PDADMAC/PSS membranes.
Keywords
- chaotropicity
- layer-by-layer
- nanofiltration
- polyelectrolyte
- specific ion effects
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Research Conducted at Eindhoven University of Technology Has Updated Our Knowledge about Polymer Materials [Addressing Specific (Poly)Ion Effects for Layer-by-layer Membranes]
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