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Engineering Carbon Nanotube Forest Superstructure for Robust Thermal Desalination Membranes

Year: 2019

Journal: Adv. Funct. Mater., Volume 29, SEP

Authors: Sun, Meng; Boo, Chanhee; Shi, Wenbo; Rolf, Julianne; Shaulsky, Evyatar; Cheng, Wei; Plata, Desiree L.; Qu, Jiuhui; Elimelech, Menachem

Keywords: antifouling; antimicrobial; carbon nanotube forest; membrane desalination; wettability

Desalination by membrane distillation (MD) using low-grade or waste heat provides a potential route for sustainable water supply. Nonwetting, porous membranes that provide a selective pathway for water vapor over nonvolatile salt are at the core of MD desalination. Conventional water-repelling MD membranes (i.e., hydrophobic and superhydrophobic membranes) fail to ensure long-term desalination performance due to pore wetting and surface fouling. To address these challenges, a defect-free carbon nanotube forest (CNTF) is engineered in situ on a porous electrospun silica fiber substrate. The engineered CNTF forms an ultrarough and porous interface structure, allowing outstanding wetting resistance against water in air and oil underwater. As a result of this antiwetting property, the composite CNTF membrane displays a stable water vapor flux and a near complete salt rejection (>99.9%) in the desalination of highly saline water containing low surface tension contaminants. The antimicrobial property of the composite CNTF membrane imparted by the unique forest-like architecture and the oxidative effect of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are further demonstrated. The results exemplify an effective strategy for engineering CNT architecture to elucidate the structure-property-performance relationship of the nanocomposite membranes and to guide the design of robust thermal desalination membranes.