and costly device, as well as the inability to separate efficiently various emulsions including oil-in-water and water-in-oil types.Taking all strategies into account, membrane separation technique governed by interfacial phenomena is regarded as an ideal candidate due to the advantages of method simplicity, low cost, and high efficiency. [13][14][15][16] Since the idea of taking special wettability into membrane separation technique was proposed, [13] superwetting materials have aroused considerable interest in either immiscible oil/water separation or emulsified oil/water ones. Numerous superwetting materials have been realized in terms of the synergistic effect of chemical composition and hierarchical structures on the surface in last decades. Nevertheless, the surfaces of accustomed superwetting materials have constant water wettability of superhydrophilicity or superhydrophobicity, which are classified into "water-removing" materials or "oil-removing" materials aiming to separate single type of oil/ water mixtures. [17][18][19][20] The rigid wettability for nonswitchable separation type cannot adapt to the multicomponent immiscible oil/water mixtures involved different density of oils, not to mention the disposal of oil-in-water or water-in-oil emulsions in the actual processing situation. Hence, it is expected that smart materials with tunable wettability in response to external stimuli are promising for application of multitype oil/water separation, which requires simpler separation equipment and lower energy consumption than monofunctional separation materials.Driven by the actual processing demand for oily sewage treatment, impressive progress has been made in the field of smart materials that show switchable and reversible wettability in response to external stimulus, such as electric field, [21,22] light irradiation, [23][24][25] temperature, [26,27] counterions, [28,29] pH value, [30][31][32] or multistimuli. [33,34] For instance, Kung et al. demonstrated an approach for fast and reversible control over the wettability of electrodeposited copper meshes by electrochemical manipulating of the oxidation state of the copper oxide shell phase, achieving the controllable separation of immiscible oil/water mixtures in either oil removal or water-removal mode. [21] Kwon et al. prepared dye-sensitized nanoporous TiO 2 surfaces via dip-coating method to change selectively the wettability toward contacting liquids upon visible light illumination, revealing promise of new light-driven oil-water cleanup and demulsification technology. [23] Our Water contaminated with various oils has become one of the most pervasive environmental issues. Developing an efficient and durable separation membrane is of significance but challenging due to the critical limitations of nonuniversality and discontinuity for oil/water separation. Herein, a material is presented by combining the porous nylon membrane with self-assembled thiol molecules, exhibiting tunable wettability property upon the pH variation. Such a smart membrane show...