Bifunctional
photocatalytic nanofiltration (PNF) membranes
are
of increasing significance in removing micropollutants in the actual
water environment, but there are still critical bottlenecks that greatly
limit their practicality. In this work, a metal-free and visible light-responsive
surface-anchored PNF membrane was fabricated for simultaneously and
efficiently removing target antibiotics from real river water in a
continuous flow-through process. The results exhibited that the optimal
PNF-3 membrane was expectedly consisted of an inside tight sub-nanopore
structured separation layer and an outside thinner, super hydrophilic
mesoporous degradation layer. Consequently, the PNF-3 membrane irradiated
via visible light exhibited outstanding removal rates of sulfamethoxazole,
trimethoprim, and chloramphenicol (between 99.0 and 99.9%), accompanied
with almost constant high water permeability. In addition, after repeating
the fouling–physical rinsing process three times that lasted
for 60 h, only sporadic adherent contaminants remained on the top
surface, together with minimal total and irreversible fouling ratios
(only 7.9 and 1.2%), strongly proving that the PNF-3 membrane displayed
good self-cleaning performance. In addition, the acute and chronic
biotoxicities of its permeate to Virbrio qinghaiensis sp. -67 were also reduced significantly to 11.4 and 10.1%, respectively.
This study might provide valuable insights into the continuous enhancement
of the practicality and effectiveness of PNF membranes in micro-polluted
water purification scenarios.
Bifunctional photocatalytic nanofiltration (PNF) membrane has gradually become one of the research hotspots in the field of micro-polluted water purification. But its usability still needs to be greatly improved. To...
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