Journal of Membrane Science | 2019

Fabrication of mullite ceramic-supported carbon nanotube composite membranes with enhanced performance in direct separation of high-temperature emulsified oil droplets

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract The direct treatment of high-temperature oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions is a challenging energy-saving water treatment issue for membrane technology, where thermally resistant separation membranes are required. This work proposes the rational design and facile fabrication of a thermally resistant mullite-CNT (carbon nanotube) composite membrane with a hierarchical structure for the high-temperature direct removal of tiny oil droplets from O/W emulsions. CNTs were grown in situ on/inside robust mullite ceramic hollow fibers by chemical vapor deposition (CVD), where hydrogen gas was produced as by-product with a concentration as high as 5.5% at 600\u202f°C. After structural characterization, the high-temperature separation capability of mullite-CNT composite ultrafiltration membranes was assessed. The membranes exhibited excellent performance with high oil rejection of 100%, 99.99%, 99.99% and 99.99% and increased initial permeate fluxes from 6.5, 9.7, 12.8–15.7\u202fL\u202fm−2\u202fh−1 at the investigated temperatures of 25, 50, 80 and 100\u202f°C. A simple cleaning method using dilute aqueous NaOH without energy consumption was used to effectively accomplish membrane regeneration. Our results indicate that ceramic-CNT membrane is promising for highly efficient direct separation of high-temperature O/W emulsions without the necessity of including a cooling process, thus providing recovered hot water with intensive energy saving in practical industrial applications.

Volume 582
Pages 140-150
DOI 10.1016/J.MEMSCI.2019.04.001
Language English
Journal Journal of Membrane Science

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