Membranes (Feb 2023)

Outstanding Separation Performance of Oil-in-Water Emulsions with TiO<sub>2</sub>/CNT Nanocomposite-Modified PVDF Membranes

  • Laura Fekete,
  • Ákos Ferenc Fazekas,
  • Cecilia Hodúr,
  • Zsuzsanna László,
  • Áron Ágoston,
  • László Janovák,
  • Tamás Gyulavári,
  • Zsolt Pap,
  • Klara Hernadi,
  • Gábor Veréb

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/membranes13020209
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 209

Abstract

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Membrane filtration is an effective technique for separating micro- and nano-sized oil droplets from harmful oil-contaminated waters produced by numerous industrial activities. However, significant flux reduction discourages the extensive application of this technology; therefore, developing antifouling membranes is necessary. For this purpose, various titanium dioxide/carbon nanotube (TiO2/CNT) nanocomposites (containing 1, 2, and 5 wt.% multi-walled CNTs) were used for the modification of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) ultrafilter (250 kDa) membrane surfaces. The effects of surface modifications were compared in relation to the flux, the filtration resistance, the flux recovery ratio, and the purification efficiency. TiO2/CNT2% composite modification reduced both irreversible and total filtration resistances the most during the filtration of 100 ppm oil emulsions. The fluxes were approximately 4–7 times higher compared to the unmodified PVDF membrane, depending on the used transmembrane pressure (510, 900, and 1340 L/m2h fluxes were measured at 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3 MPa pressures, respectively). Moreover, the flux recovery ratio (up to 68%) and the purification efficiency (95.1–99.8%) were also significantly higher because of the surface modification, and the beneficial effects were more dominant at higher transmembrane pressures. TiO2/CNT2% nanocomposites are promising to be applied to modify membranes used for oil–water separation and achieve outstanding flux, cleanability, and purification efficiency.

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