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Superhydrophilic adsorptive nanofiber membranes for ultrafast and highly-efficient waterborne nanoplastic removal

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Jingwen Zhou, Mi Zhou, Longjun Wang, Jianhua Tong, Xinhao Li, Jingru Zhou, Yuqian He, Linlin Yan, Xiquan Cheng

Summary

Researchers engineered a superhydrophilic nanofiber membrane by cross-linking polyethylene oxide into a polylactic acid polymer network, achieving greater than 99.99% separation efficiency for nanoplastics larger than 150 nm through combined hydrophobic and pi-pi molecular interactions, with water permeance 53 times higher than conventional membranes under gravity-driven flow.

Polymers

Nanoplastics have emerged as hazardous contaminants of growing concern, presenting escalating risks to aquatic ecosystems and human health. While nanofiber membranes are compelling candidates for waterborne nanoplastic removal with high water permeation, nanoplastics have been proven hard to effectively separate due to the mismatch between the size removal threshold and nanoparticle size. Herein, we propose a synergistic adsorption-separation strategy that optimizes membrane structure and interfacial adsorption interactions via constructing entangled polyethylene oxide cross-linked network structures with polylactic polymer chains, which can capture polystyrene nanoplactics via multiple interfacial interactions (C-H⋯π/O-H⋯π interactions and hydrophobic interactions), amplify momentum attenuation and enable more than 99.99 % separation efficiency for the nanoplastics diameter larger than 150 nm. Simultaneously, polyethylene oxide (PEO) incorporation induced better hydrophilization and remarkable water permeation (60.4°→0° within 2.4 s), causing a permeance enhancement (3.21 ×10 L m h bar under gravity-driven and 53.50 times higher than the original membrane). Besides the superior separation performance, the membrane maintains outstanding long-term separation stability, anti-fouling capability, and broad adaptability for sustainable NPs removal, outperforming state-of-the-art membranes. This breakthrough in design establishes a new example for treating volumes of nanoplastics in a short time, showing prominent treatment ability for multi-demand practical water and tremendous potential for water purification applications.

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