Exploration of bio-renewable solvents in membrane fabrication for applications in alcohol recovery and water purification
dc.contributor.advisor
Semiao, Andrea Correia
dc.contributor.advisor
Lau, Cher Hon
dc.contributor.advisor
Romero-Vargas Castrillon, Santiago
dc.contributor.author
Akram, Ammara
dc.date.accessioned
2022-12-05T10:54:20Z
dc.date.available
2022-12-05T10:54:20Z
dc.date.issued
2022-12-05
dc.description.abstract
Membrane separation is one of the most widespread sustainable and ecological technologies
for purifying and separating waste streams. This process can substitute thermal
separation processes such as distillation, evaporation, and crystallisation. Membrane
separation has been proven to be promising for liquid separations due to the high efficiency,
low operation cost and energy-saving performance in numerous applications of this process.
Nanofiltration (NF) is a pressure-driven membrane separation process that employs
membranes for molecular separation and purification in liquid applications. Organic solvent
nanofiltration (OSN) is a membrane process for molecular separation in harsh organic
media. It excludes molecules dissolved in organic solvents based on shape, charge and
size, allowing the reuse of solvents. NF membranes are typically produced as thin-film
composite (TFC) membranes comprising of a thin porous selective layer typically derived
from amines and acyl chlorides deposited on a porous substrate created from petroleumderived
synthetic polymers. The materials used in both layers are toxic, hazardous,
petroleum-derived and non-biodegradable contributing to landfill and pollution. In recent
years, works reported in the literature have been invested in embedding sustainability into
membrane fabrication through the use of bio-renewable solvents and the use of sustainable
raw materials. Although considerable progress has been made in the past few years with
the production of green solvents from renewable feedstock, the use of these solvents for
membrane fabrication has not been fully explored as new solvents are constantly emerging.
The work in this thesis aims to replace conventional materials used for membrane
fabrication to create membranes that have lower environmental impact and health and
safety concerns through the use of bio-renewable solvents and sustainable fabrication
methods. The work in this thesis extends current research in green solvents through the
exploration of Cyrene™ and 2-Methyltetrahydrofuran (2-MeTHF) for TFC membrane
fabrication, two solvents that have not yet been explored. The work also investigated the
application of these bio-renewable membranes in aqueous and organic solvent nanofiltration.
The thesis starts with the development of support that is stable in a wide range of
organic solvents, allowing it to become the foundation of a thin film composite membrane
that could be utilised in OSN applications. A comparative study was carried out, and
supports were produced using Dimethylformamide, (DMF) (the conventionally used solvent)
which were compared to supports produced using Cyrene™ (the bio-renewable alternative).
The study looked at investigating the effects of using a bio-renewable solvent on the
resultant support characteristics. The thermal and chemical stability, solvent filtration and
morphology of the two supports were investigated. An important aspect considered in this
project was the operating conditions for membrane fabrication. Traditional membranes are
produced using complicated lengthy sixteen-hour energy-intensive procedures, the work
in this project aimed to produce membranes using benign room temperature conditions.
The fabrication of polyimide (PI) the most conventional polymer used in OSN membrane
fabrication and Cyrene™ were explored and the combination of the polymer/solvent/nonsolvent
was unsuccessful in creating support. The polymer was changed to a renewable
polymer, cellulose acetate (CA), and quick room temperature fabrication methods for
90 minutes were utilised to produce supports stable in harsh organic environments. The
bio-renewable supports exhibited excellent permeance of solvents, and a 115% increase in
water permeation was experienced compared to the traditional support produced using
DMF. Protocols in this work were established that produced supports that maintained
structural integrity and excellent stability in DMF immersion at 100 °C and performed
well in different solvent environments.
The second part of this thesis was to fabricate polyamide, the selective layer used in a
TFC membrane using 2-MeTHF. The polymer was studied and fully characterised and
compared to the traditional polyamide produced using the petroleum-derived n-hexane
solvent. The two polyamide layers were deposited onto the support produced using
Cyrene™, and a TFC membrane was created using only bio-renewable solvents. Ethanol
permeance of 2.5 L m⁻² h⁻¹ bar⁻¹ was experienced when using the n-hexane derived
polyamide, and this increased to 11.2 L m⁻² h⁻¹ bar⁻¹ when 2-MeTHF was utilised as
the solvent for interfacial polymerisation. A further 900% increase of ethanol permeance
was experienced after DMF activation, reaching 25 L m⁻² h⁻¹ bar⁻¹. A detailed study
was carried out to test for OSN applications with a range of dyes with varying molecular
weights and charges and the molecular dye rejection rates of the bio-renewable TFC
membrane reached 98%, higher than the n-hexane derived polyamide TFC membrane at
94%. The membrane produced solely from bio-renewable solvents outperformed current
state-of-the-art membranes and mixed matrix membranes that incorporate fillers into the
membrane for enhanced separation performance.
The final part of the thesis explored the potential of the bio-renewable TFC membranes
being utilised in aqueous NF applications using a feed solution of different salts. The performance
capabilities of the bio-renewable membrane were compared with a commercially
available NF TFC membrane, NF 270. The bio-renewable TFC membrane experienced
a higher water permanence compared to the NF 270 TFC membrane at 17.8 L m⁻² h⁻¹
bar⁻¹ and 11.8 L m⁻² h⁻¹ bar⁻¹ respectively. Further to this, magnesium chloride rejection
for the bio-renewable TFC membrane reached 39% while the NF 270 TFC membrane
reached 36%. The bio-renewable membrane outperformed the commercial membrane, and
this opens up an interesting avenue of research, as the use of sustainable materials and
benign operating conditions could compete with the current state-of-the-art membranes.
The results presented in this thesis make a valuable contribution to the exploration
of the two bio-renewable solvents for membrane fabrication. The fabrication strategies
developed in this work are time-saving, energy-efficient and cost-effective and protocols
were established that have improved health, safety and environmental impact. Nextgeneration
membranes can be fabricated with sustainable materials to produce membranes
that potentially have higher through-puts and require less energy for separations to occur
which could potentially transform polymer membrane fabrication into a more sustainable
process.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/39556
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/2806
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
Pressure driven membranes
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dc.subject
Membrane performance
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dc.subject
Nanofiltration
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dc.subject
Aqueous nanofiltration
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dc.subject
Organic solvent nanofiltration
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dc.subject
Membrane fabrication
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dc.subject
interfacial polymerisation
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dc.title
Exploration of bio-renewable solvents in membrane fabrication for applications in alcohol recovery and water purification
en
dc.title.alternative
The exploration of bio-renewable solvents in membrane fabrication for applications in alcohol recovery and water purification
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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