Rejection mechanisms for contaminants in polymeric reverse osmosis membranes
Meng Shen, Sinan Keten, Richard M. Lueptow

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to elucidate the molecular mechanisms behind contaminant rejection in polymeric reverse osmosis membranes, revealing how solute size, solvation, and membrane structure influence rejection efficiency.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the molecular-level rejection mechanisms in RO membranes, emphasizing the roles of solute-water interactions and membrane pore structure.
Findings
Rejection varies non-monotonically with ion size.
Solute-water pair interaction energy influences rejection when open spaces are comparable to solute size.
Urea's higher rejection is due to its hydrogen bonding capacity.
Abstract
Despite the success of reverse osmosis (RO) for water purification, the molecular-level physico-chemical processes of contaminant rejection are not well understood. Here we carry out NEMD simulations on a model polyamide RO membrane to understand the mechanisms of transport and rejection of both ionic and neutral contaminants in water. We observe that the rejection changes non-monotonously with ion sizes. In particular, the rejection of urea, 2.4 A radius, is higher than ethanol, 2.6 A radius, and the rejections for organic solutes, 2.2-2.8 A radius, are lower than Na+, 1.4 A radius, or Cl-, 2.3 A radius. We show that this can be explained in terms of the solute accessible intermolecular volume in the membrane and the solute-water pair interaction energy. If the smallest open spaces in the membrane's molecular structure are all larger than the hydrated solute, then the solute-water pair…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
