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Dive into the research topics where Roy Bernstein is active.

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Featured researches published by Roy Bernstein.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Bacterial attachment to RO membranes surface-modified by concentration-polarization-enhanced graft polymerization.

Roy Bernstein; S. Belfer; Viatcheslav Freger

Concentration polarization-enhanced radical graft polymerization, a facile surface modification technique, was examined as an approach to reduce bacterial deposition onto RO membranes and thus contribute to mitigation of biofouling. For this purpose an RO membrane ESPA-1 was surface-grafted with a zwitterionic and negatively and positively charged monomers. The low monomer concentrations and low degrees of grafting employed in modifications moderately reduced flux (by 20-40%) and did not affect salt rejection, yet produced substantial changes in surface chemistry, charge and hydrophilicity. The propensity to bacterial attachment of original and modified membranes was assessed using bacterial deposition tests carried out in a parallel plate flow setup using a fluorescent strain of Pseudomonas fluorescens. Compared to unmodified ESPA-1 the deposition (mass transfer) coefficient was significantly increased for modification with the positively charged monomer. On the other hand, a substantial reduction in bacterial deposition rates was observed for membranes modified with zwitterionic monomer and, still more, with very hydrophilic negatively charged monomers. This trend is well explained by the effects of surface charge (as measured by ζ-potential) and hydrophilicity (contact angle). It also well correlated with force distance measurements by AFM using surrogate spherical probes with a negative surface charge mimicking the bacterial surface. The positively charged surface showed a strong hysteresis with a large adhesion force, which was weaker for unmodified ESPA-1 and still weaker for zwitterionic surface, while negatively charged surface showed a long-range repulsion and negligible hysteresis. These results demonstrate the potential of using the proposed surface- modification approach for varying surface characteristics, charge and hydrophilicity, and thus minimizing bacterial deposition and potentially reducing propensity biofouling.


Langmuir | 2010

Surface modification of dense membranes using radical graft polymerization enhanced by monomer filtration.

Roy Bernstein; S. Belfer; Viatcheslav Freger

Surface graft polymerization is a promising way to modify membranes for improved performance. Redox-initiated graft polymerization of vinyl monomers is a facile and inexpensive method carried out at room temperature in aqueous media; however, its use is often limited by slow kinetics, low surface specificity, and excessive consumption of chemicals on undesired homopolymerization. It is shown that in the case of RO or NF membranes these drawbacks may be eliminated by utilizing the selectivity of the membranes toward monomers and carrying out the polymerization while applying pressure, i.e., under filtration conditions. Concentration polarization that ensues raises the concentration of reagents near the membrane surface and thereby drastically increases the rate of reaction and preferentially directs it towards surface grafting. Grafting experiments using 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate and other monomers and characterization of modified membranes using permeability measurements, ATR-FTIR, AFM, XPS, and contact angle demonstrate that the required monomer concentrations can be drastically reduced, particularly when a small fraction of a cross-linker is added. As an additional benefit, this approach enables broadening the spectrum of utilizable monomers to sparingly soluble hydrophobic, charged, and macro-monomers, as was demonstrated using sparingly soluble ethyl methacrylate and 2-ethoxyethyl methacrylate and other monomers. Even though the kinetics of the process is substantially complicated by evolution and concentration polarization of oligomeric and polymeric species, especially in the presence of a cross-linker, it is well offset by the benefits of higher rate, specificity, and reduced monomer consumption.


Biofouling | 2014

‘Should I stay or should I go?’ Bacterial attachment vs biofilm formation on surface-modified membranes

Roy Bernstein; Viatcheslav Freger; Jin-Hyung Lee; Yong-Guy Kim; Jintae Lee; Moshe Herzberg

A number of techniques are used for testing the anti-biofouling activity of surfaces, yet the correlation between different results is often questionable. In this report, the correlation between initial bacterial deposition (fast tests, reported previously) and biofilm growth (much slower tests) was analyzed on a pristine and a surface-modified reverse osmosis membrane ESPA-1. The membrane was modified with grafted hydrophilic polymers bearing negatively charged, positively charged and zwitter-ionic moieties. Using three different bacterial strains it was found that there was no general correlation between the initial bacterial deposition rates and biofilm growth on surfaces, the reasons being different for each modified surface. For the negatively charged surface the slowest deposition due to the charge repulsion was eventually succeeded by the largest biofilm growth, probably due to secretion of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) that mediated a strong attachment. For the positively charged surface, short-term charge attraction by quaternary amine groups led to the fastest deposition, but could be eventually overridden by their antimicrobial activity, resulting in non-consistent results where in some cases a lower biofilm formation rate was observed. The results indicate that initial deposition rates have to be used and interpreted with great care, when used for assessing the anti-biofouling activity of surfaces. However, for a weakly interacting ‘low-fouling’ zwitter-ionic surface, the positive correlation between initial cell deposition and biofilm growth, especially under flow, suggests that for this type of coating initial deposition tests may be fairly indicative of anti-biofouling potential.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Toward Improved Boron Removal in RO by Membrane Modification: Feasibility and Challenges

Roy Bernstein; S. Belfer; Viatcheslav Freger


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2012

UV-photo graft functionalization of polyethersulfone membrane with strong polyelectrolyte hydrogel and its application for nanofiltration.

Roy Bernstein; Enrique Antón; Mathias Ulbricht


Journal of Membrane Science | 2010

Facile surface modification of nanofiltration membranes to target the removal of endocrine-disrupting compounds

Adi Ben-David; Roy Bernstein; Yoram Oren; S. Belfer; Carlos G. Dosoretz; Viatcheslav Freger


Journal of Membrane Science | 2013

Tuning the nanofiltration performance of thin film strong polyelectrolyte hydrogel composite membranes by photo-grafting conditions

Roy Bernstein; Enrique Antón; Mathias Ulbricht


Journal of Membrane Science | 2012

Improving performance of spiral wound RO elements by in situ concentration polarization-enhanced radical graft polymerization

Roy Bernstein; S. Belfer; Viatcheslav Freger


Journal of Membrane Science | 2017

High-flux thin-film composite polyelectrolyte hydrogel membranes for ethanol dehydration by pervaporation

Jinpeng Liu; Roy Bernstein


Advanced Functional Materials | 2017

Ultrathin Single Bilayer Separation Membranes Based on Hyperbranched Sulfonated Poly(aryleneoxindole)

Nithya Joseph; Joice Thomas; Pejman Ahmadiannamini; Hans Van Gorp; Roy Bernstein; Steven De Feyter; Mario Smet; Wim Dehaen; Richard Hoogenboom; Ivo Vankelecom

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Viatcheslav Freger

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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S. Belfer

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Wei Zhang

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Yoram Oren

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Mathias Ulbricht

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Adi Ben-David

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Amos Bick

Jerusalem College of Technology

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Avraham Be’er

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Canwei Mao

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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