2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(524b) Kidney-Inspired Membranes with Enhanced Anti-Fouling Properties, through Grafting of Stimuli-Responsive Polymer Brushes
Authors
To translate this source of inspiration into the context of artificial membranes, the design employed here involves the grafting of polyelectrolyte polymer brushes as an anti-fouling layer onto track-etched polyester (PET) membranes. This grafting is achieved through Surface-Initiated Controlled Radical Polymerization (SI-CRP) using Activators Regenerated by Electron Transfer Atomic Transfer Radical Polymerization (ARGET ATRP). The stimuli-responsive polymer brushes reduce fouling through the formation of a hydration layer, steric repulsion and electrostatic interactions, due to the negative charge of the layer at pH above its pKa. This has been demonstrated in the filtration of bovine serum albumin. The flux decline for the modified membranes showed a significant improvement over unmodified membranes with maximum flux declines of 24% and 60% over 0.5 h, respectively. This is related to the enhanced hydrophilicity of the membranes seen in Figure 1.
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