Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing

This work investigates the structural formation and analyses of titania membranes (TM) prepared using different vacuum exposure times for molecular weight (MW) cut-off performance and oil/water separation. Titania membranes were synthesized via a sol-gel method and coated on macroporous alumina tube...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Materials
Main Author: Jalil S.N.A.; Wang D.K.; Yacou C.; Motuzas J.; Smart S.; da Costa J.C.D.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85002428373&doi=10.3390%2fma9110938&partnerID=40&md5=7e547ad7e2dab73fa2e39942d6f848eb
id 2-s2.0-85002428373
spelling 2-s2.0-85002428373
Jalil S.N.A.; Wang D.K.; Yacou C.; Motuzas J.; Smart S.; da Costa J.C.D.
Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing
2016
Materials
9
11
10.3390/ma9110938
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85002428373&doi=10.3390%2fma9110938&partnerID=40&md5=7e547ad7e2dab73fa2e39942d6f848eb
This work investigates the structural formation and analyses of titania membranes (TM) prepared using different vacuum exposure times for molecular weight (MW) cut-off performance and oil/water separation. Titania membranes were synthesized via a sol-gel method and coated on macroporous alumina tubes followed by exposure to a vacuum between 30 and 1200 s and then calcined at 400 °C. X-ray diffraction and nitrogen adsorption analyses showed that the crystallite size and particle size of titania increased as a function of vacuum time. All the TM membranes were mesoporous with an average pore diameter of ~3.6 nm with an anatase crystal morphology. Water, glucose, sucrose, and polyvinylpyrrolidone with 40 and 360 kDa (PVP-40 kDa and PVP-360 kDa) were used as feed solutions for MW cut-off and hexadecane solution for oil filtration investigation. The TM membranes were not able to separate glucose and sucrose, thus indicating the membrane pore sizes are larger than the kinetic diameter of sucrose of 0.9 nm, irrespective of vacuum exposure time. They also showed only moderate rejection (20%) of the smaller PVP-40 kDa, however, all the membranes were able to obtain an excellent rejection of near 100% for the larger PVP-360 kDa molecule. Furthermore, the TM membranes were tested for the separation of oil emulsions with a high concentration of oil (3000 ppm), reaching high oil rejections of more than 90% of oil. In general, the water fluxes increased with the vacuum exposure time indicating a pore structural tailoring effect. It is therefore proposed that a mechanism of pore size tailoring was formed by an interconnected network of Ti-O-Ti nanoparticles with inter-particle voids, which increased as TiO2 nanoparticle size increased as a function of vacuum exposure time, and thus reduced the water transport resistance through the TM membranes. © 2016 by the authors.
MDPI AG
19961944
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Jalil S.N.A.; Wang D.K.; Yacou C.; Motuzas J.; Smart S.; da Costa J.C.D.
spellingShingle Jalil S.N.A.; Wang D.K.; Yacou C.; Motuzas J.; Smart S.; da Costa J.C.D.
Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing
author_facet Jalil S.N.A.; Wang D.K.; Yacou C.; Motuzas J.; Smart S.; da Costa J.C.D.
author_sort Jalil S.N.A.; Wang D.K.; Yacou C.; Motuzas J.; Smart S.; da Costa J.C.D.
title Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing
title_short Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing
title_full Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing
title_fullStr Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing
title_full_unstemmed Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing
title_sort Molecular weight cut-off and structural analysis of vacuum-assisted titania membranes for water processing
publishDate 2016
container_title Materials
container_volume 9
container_issue 11
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ma9110938
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85002428373&doi=10.3390%2fma9110938&partnerID=40&md5=7e547ad7e2dab73fa2e39942d6f848eb
description This work investigates the structural formation and analyses of titania membranes (TM) prepared using different vacuum exposure times for molecular weight (MW) cut-off performance and oil/water separation. Titania membranes were synthesized via a sol-gel method and coated on macroporous alumina tubes followed by exposure to a vacuum between 30 and 1200 s and then calcined at 400 °C. X-ray diffraction and nitrogen adsorption analyses showed that the crystallite size and particle size of titania increased as a function of vacuum time. All the TM membranes were mesoporous with an average pore diameter of ~3.6 nm with an anatase crystal morphology. Water, glucose, sucrose, and polyvinylpyrrolidone with 40 and 360 kDa (PVP-40 kDa and PVP-360 kDa) were used as feed solutions for MW cut-off and hexadecane solution for oil filtration investigation. The TM membranes were not able to separate glucose and sucrose, thus indicating the membrane pore sizes are larger than the kinetic diameter of sucrose of 0.9 nm, irrespective of vacuum exposure time. They also showed only moderate rejection (20%) of the smaller PVP-40 kDa, however, all the membranes were able to obtain an excellent rejection of near 100% for the larger PVP-360 kDa molecule. Furthermore, the TM membranes were tested for the separation of oil emulsions with a high concentration of oil (3000 ppm), reaching high oil rejections of more than 90% of oil. In general, the water fluxes increased with the vacuum exposure time indicating a pore structural tailoring effect. It is therefore proposed that a mechanism of pore size tailoring was formed by an interconnected network of Ti-O-Ti nanoparticles with inter-particle voids, which increased as TiO2 nanoparticle size increased as a function of vacuum exposure time, and thus reduced the water transport resistance through the TM membranes. © 2016 by the authors.
publisher MDPI AG
issn 19961944
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809677786505281536