Articles
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Feb 6, 2024 |
nature.com | Andrea I. Schäfer |Melinda L. Jue |Sei Jin Park |Florian Vollnhals |Minh N. Nguyen |Francesco Fornasiero | +2 more
Vertically-aligned carbon nanotube (VaCNT) membranes allow water to conduct rapidly at low pressures and open up the possibility for water purification and desalination, although the ultralow viscous stress in hydrophobic and low-tortuosity nanopores prevents surface interactions with contaminants. In this experimental investigation, steroid hormone micropollutant adsorption by VaCNT membranes is quantified and explained via the interplay of the hydrodynamic drag and friction forces acting on the hormone, and the adhesive and repulsive forces between the hormone and the inner carbon nanotube wall. It is concluded that a drag force above 2.2 × 10−3 pN overcomes the friction force resulting in insignificant adsorption, whereas lowering the drag force from 2.2 × 10−3 to 4.3 × 10−4 pN increases the adsorbed mass of hormones from zero to 0.4 ng cm−2. At a low drag force of 1.6 × 10−3 pN, the adsorbed mass of four hormones is correlated with the hormone−wall adhesive (van der Waals) force. These findings explain micropollutant adsorption in nanopores via the forces acting on the micropollutant along and perpendicular to the flow, which can be exploited for selectivity. Micropollutant removal in polymeric nanofiltration membranes is difficult to characterise due to pore heterogeneity. A force interplay framework was developed to describe adsorption in VaCNT membranes with defined nanopores, providing insight for the design of membranes with improved selectivity.
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