Electroactive membranes have the potential to address
membrane
fouling via electrokinetic phenomena. However, additional energy consumption
and complex material design represent chief barriers to achieving
sustainable and economically viable antifouling performance. Herein,
we present a novel strategy for fabricating a piezoelectric antifouling
polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) membrane (Pi-UFM) by integrating the
ion–dipole interactions (NaCl coagulation bath) and mild poling
(in situ electric field) into a one-step phase separation process.
This Pi-UFM with an intact porous structure could be self-powered
in a typical ultrafiltration (UF) process via the responsivity to
pressure stimuli, where the dominant β-PVDF phase and the out-of-plane
aligned dipoles were demonstrated to be critical to obtain piezoelectricity.
By challenging with different feed solutions, the Pi-UFM achieved
enhanced antifouling capacity for organic foulants even with high
ionic strength, suggesting that electrostatic repulsion and hydration
repulsion were behind the antifouling mechanism. Furthermore, the
TMP-dependent output performance of the Pi-UFM in both air and water
confirmed its ability for converting ambient mechanical energy to
in situ surface potential (ζ), demonstrating that this antifouling
performance was a result of the membrane electromechanical transducer
actions. Therefore, this study provides useful insight and strategy
to enable piezoelectric materials for membrane filtration applications
with energy efficiency and extend functionalities.
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