Chlorine-Resistant
Reverse-Osmosis Membrane
Description
Current state-of-the-art technology for
reverse osmosis filtration of water has one major flaw: the
addition of chlorine can cause the membrane to degrade. However,
when treating saltwater or brackish water, it is necessary
to introduce chlorine for sanitation and disinfection purposes.
Unfortunately, commercially available membranes encounter
significant problems when chlorine is introduced: namely,
the degradation of the membrane, followed by the severe reduction
of the permeability of the membrane and salt rejection rates.
This invention satisfies the need for
a chlorine-tolerant reverse osmosis membrane that can control
membrane biofouling and eliminate the dechlorination steps
involved at desalination plants. A chlorine-tolerant reverse
osmosis membrane allows for higher feed pressure (i.e., higher
flux) without biofouling, as the flux no longer has to be
restricted to low feed pressure to prevent flux from being
greater than a critical value beyond which biofouling occurs.
The existing commercial thin-film composite membranes have
high water flux and salt rejection, but lack chemical stability
to oxidants (e.g., chlorine), have a high fouling rate due
to surface roughness, and undergo biofouling due to a strong
bacteria affinity.
The current invention is a polymeric membrane that can withstand
the addition of chlorine into water purification systems such
as reverse osmosis (desalination) and nano-filtration. This
new membrane can accommodate chlorine, while having minimal
effect on membrane flux and salt rejection rates. It is effective
in filtering oily waters and water containing components such
as algae, organic contaminants, and harmful trace metals like
arsenic.
Benefits
- Simple manufacturing process
- Highly reproducible technique
- Increased efficiency
- Cost-effective
- Versatile
- Outperforms commercially available membranes
Features
- Chlorine resistant
- High desalinization rates
- Excellent permeability
- Structural versatility
- Excellent mechanical properties
Market Potential/Applications
The U.S. water filtration market is a
multi-billion dollar industry. Due to its superior properties,
this membrane has the potential to become the new standard
for reverse osmosis filtration.
For further information please contact:
University of Texas,
Austin, USA
Website : www.otc.utexas.edu

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