Hydrogels are excellent for protecting membranes from oil fouling for oil/water separation. However, conventional hydrogels including adhesive hydrogels have a contradictory between high adhesion on membranes and anti‐oil‐fouling ability. Herein, the design of an adhesive hydrogel on membranes is proposed by ingeniously integrating high adhesion on membranes, outstanding anti‐oil‐fouling ability, ultrathin thickness suitable for membrane decoration and satisfactory durability, where an inside‐out gradient distribution of adhesive protocatechuic acid (PCA) and hydrated calcium alginate (CaAlg) on membranes is constructed. The innermost PCA enables the adhesive hydrogel to tightly adhere to the membranes. The outermost CaAlg defends membranes from oil fouling. The gradient distribution and uniform integration of PCA/CaAlg guarantee an excellent stability. Membranes decorated with the adhesive hydrogel demonstrate superhydrophilicity, anti‐fouling to various oils, and anti‐abrasion to external damaging. The membranes achieve ultra‐stable and efficient separation of surfactant‐stabilized oil‐in‐water emulsions and crude oil/water mixture with the most advanced cycling ability of ≈100% flux recovery and nearly zero irreversible oil fouling. This study provides a new strategy for designing anti‐oil‐fouling membranes toward practical oil/water separation applications.
Water-soluble volatile organic compounds (VOCs) widely exist in wastewater and are among the most difficult-to-treat contaminants. Purification and removal of VOCs rely on energy-intensive technologies like distillation, reverse osmosis, or...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.