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The change from hydrophilicity to hydrophobicity of HEC/PAA complex membrane for water-in-oil emulsion separation: Thermal versus chemical treatment.

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Recently, the growing environmental concerns and economic demands drive the need to develop effective solutions for the treatment of oily wastewater, especially for oil/water emulsions. In this work, hydroxyethyl cellulose… Click to show full abstract

Recently, the growing environmental concerns and economic demands drive the need to develop effective solutions for the treatment of oily wastewater, especially for oil/water emulsions. In this work, hydroxyethyl cellulose (HEC) and poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) are selected to form a complex membrane on the surface of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) nonwoven via layer-by-layer assembly for separation of water-in-oil emulsions. In order to obtain a hydrophobic surface, two post-treatment methods, thermally and chemically induced cross-linking, are applied to modify the hydrogen-bonded HEC/PAA complex membrane. The properties of the two treated HEC/PAA-PET membranes, including surface morphology, chemical structure, chemical composition, thermal stability, mechanical property, and membrane wettability are systematically studied and compared to each other. When the membranes are applied as oil filters to treat water-in-oil emulsions with different concentrations, both of the modified membranes show excellent separation efficiencies with a more than 99.4% rejection for all tested water-in-oil emulsions.

Keywords: complex membrane; water; paa; oil; water oil

Journal Title: Carbohydrate polymers
Year Published: 2020

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