High-Flux Thin-Film Nanocomposite Reverse Osmosis Membrane for Desalination
Use of nanofiber composites to create a higher filtration rate in reverse osmosis for energy efficient separation
Reverse osmosis (RO) is one of the most energy efficient separation technologies to remove salt ions from brackish water or seawater. Conventional RO membranes possess a thin film composite (TFC) structure, containing an ultra-thin barrier layer. This layer can be used as a filter. However, nanofillers may be incorporated into the polyamide barrier layer to improve either the permeability or separation efficiency when separating materials.
Using a nanocomposite barrier layer containing cellulose nanofibers and a polyamide matrix, traditional ultrafiltration (UF) substrates have demonstrated two RO applications: low pressure desalination of brackish water and high pressure desalination of seawater. Some embodiments include having cross-sectional composite fibers with such as methyl, ethyl, and butyl. In other functions, nanofibers may be physically incorporated in the barrier layer of a membrane by interfacial polymerization.
Please note, header image is purely illustrative. Source: Pxhere, https://pxhere.com/en/photo/683595, CC0.
-More efficient -Higher permeation flux -High salt rejection capability -Great filtration rate
-Nanofibers -Manufacturing -Materials -Plumbing -Water (fluids, seawater, ocean) -Environmental engineering -Chemical -Electrolysis
Patent application submitted
[WO 2018/152149](https://patentscope.wipo.int/search/en/detail.jsf?docId=WO2018152149)
Available for licensing
Development partner,Commercial partner,Licensing
Patent Information:
App Type |
Country |
Serial No. |
Patent No. |
Patent Status |
File Date |
Issued Date |
Expire Date |
|