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Spray‐Freezing‐Templated Vertically‐Graded Macroporous Aerogel Membranes for Ultrahigh‐Flux Filtration of Polydisperse Microplastics

Advanced Materials 2026
Huimin Li, Huimin Li, Qing Wu, Yingjie Liu, Xingxing He, Yi Wu, Yi Wu, Shanshan He, Ke Liu, Jia Xu, Dong Wang, Dong Wang

Summary

Researchers developed a new type of aerogel membrane with a deliberately engineered gradient in pore size — large pores at the top tapering to tiny pores at the base — fabricated in a single step using a spray-freezing technique that controls ice crystal growth. The resulting membrane achieved extraordinarily high water flow rates while retaining over 99.7% of microplastics as small as 5 micrometers, and maintained performance in sediment-rich water that clogs conventional filters. Ultra-high-flux membranes that resist fouling could significantly improve the practicality of filtering microplastics from drinking water and industrial effluents.

Study Type Environmental

Vertical gradients in membrane structure and functionality are critical for achieving high filtration efficiency, precise size selectivity, and enhanced anti-fouling properties. However, the fabrication of vertically graded membranes with controlled micro-pore size distribution and directional functionality remains a significant challenge in both scalability and reproducibility. Herein, a gradient aerogel (GE) membrane was fabricated via a one-step temperature-gradient-controlled spray-freezing process that synergistically controls substrate temperature, suspension flow rate, and nozzle-to-substrate distance to match solidification front velocity with droplet accumulation dynamics. This approach generates a seamless pore gradient from ∼100 µm at the top surface down to ∼3 µm at the base, containing restrictive pore throats as small as ∼0.2 µm. The resulting GE membrane delivers ultra-high flux of 35 586 and 25 479 L m- 2 h- 1 bar- 1 for 10 and 5 µm microplastics, respectively, with >99.7% retention. Crucially, in sediment-rich environments, the GE membrane outperforms commercial counterparts, where its hierarchical architecture effectively manages sediment load to sustain significantly higher flux and retention efficiency for polydisperse microplastics (1-10 µm). This scalable platform technology provides a versatile foundation for next-generation separation materials and multifunctional composite architectures.

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