ARTICLE
Received 1 Sep 2015 | Accepted 29 Jan 2016 | Published 7 Mar 2016
Abozar Akbari1, Phillip Sheath1, Samuel T. Martin1, Dhanraj B. Shinde1, Mahdokht Shaibani1, Parama Chakraborty Banerjee1, Rachel Tkacz1, Dibakar Bhattacharyya2 & Mainak Majumder1
Graphene-based membranes demonstrating ultrafast water transport, precise molecular sieving of gas and solvated molecules shows great promise as novel separation platforms; however, scale-up of these membranes to large-areas remains an unresolved problem. Here we demonstrate that the discotic nematic phase of graphene oxide (GO) can be shear aligned to form highly ordered, continuous, thin lms of multi-layered GO on a support membrane by an industrially adaptable method to produce large-area membranes (13 14 cm2) in o5 s. Pressure driven transport data demonstrate high retention (490%)
for charged and uncharged organic probe molecules with a hydrated radius above 5 as well as modest (3040%) retention of monovalent and divalent salts. The highly ordered graphene sheets in the plane of the membrane make organized channels and enhance the permeability (715 l m 2 hr 1 bar 1 for 15015 nm thick membranes).
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10891 OPEN
Large-area graphene-based nanoltration membranes by shear alignment of discotic nematic liquid crystals of graphene oxide
1 Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Nanoscale Science and Engineering Laboratory (NSEL), Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3800, Australia. 2 Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506, USA. Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to M.M. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ).
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10891
Advances in the design and synthesis of nanoltration membranes with improved retention, ux and cost-effectiveness will have tremendous impact in several
elds such as water treatment, selective chemical separations and drug delivery. Conventional polymeric nanoltration membranes usually have limited chemical resistance, while ceramic membranes are not cost-efcient. Graphene is a one atom thick two-dimensional honeycomb sp2 carbon lattice, which is an exciting multifunctional material and possesses a combination of strong mechanical properties, chemical inertness and extremely large surface area1,2. Membranes prepared from graphene possess the best of both the worlds: they are chemically inert3 like ceramic membranes and can be made into lms using graphene/graphene oxide (GO) uid phase dispersions like polymers. Novel and exciting transport properties of graphene-based membranes such as high permeability and high selectivity for both liquids2,47 and gases811 have recently been reported. While these studies have unlocked potential applications, there is critical need to produce these membranes in large-areas using high throughput manufacturing routes, which may otherwise hinder their impact in membrane technologies. The ideal structure of a ltration membrane has a defect-free, thin, dense separation lm that acts as a functional sieve, while the mechanical strength is provided by a porous and more permeable support. To achieve this asymmetric structure, researchers have grown continuous graphene lms by chemical vapour deposition and transferred them to substrates followed by etching pores on the lm, however, the transfer process limits the scalability of membrane production6,7. Another method to produce this structure is by restacking GO akes by ltration of GO dispersions on a backing lter support2,1214. However, producing a membrane by this approach requires large volumes of liquid, signicant time and arguably has both alignment (of the GO sheets) and scalability issues. Other liquid phase processes such as dip-coating or layer-by-layer assembly similarly have potential issues with rapid productivity15. Therefore, a major challenge in this eld is to dene robust, scalable, liquid lm processing approaches to produce large-area graphene-based membranes that will bridge laboratory curiosity to industrial productivity.
Here we introduce a scalable and industrially adaptable method to fabricate large-area graphene-based membranes by shear-induced alignment of liquid crystals of GO. The membranes have large in-plane stacking order of GO sheets and demonstrate outstanding water permeability while being able to sieve small organic molecules with performance metrics superior to well established and commercially available nanoltration membrane.
ResultsProducing liquid crystalline phases of GO. Oxidation and exfoliation of graphite by the well-known Hummers method or its variations produces graphene nanosheets decorated with oxygenated functional groups also known as GO. The anisotropic GO nanosheets can be dispersed in liquids including water as stable colloidal suspensions with large volume fractions. As the concentration of the anisotropic particles increases, the orientation entropy of the suspensions starts to decrease only to be compensated by increase in the translation entropy leading to colloidal phase transitions from isotropic to nematic liquid crystalline phasesthe onset of which has dependence on the thickness to diameter ratio of the disc-like mesogens of GO16. Liquid crystallinity denes a state between a crystal and a uid, within which the constituent sheets become anisotropic but can still ow and respond to macroscopic force-elds such as shear17, and this state has been demonstrated in concentrated dispersions of GO1,1820. Traditional means to produce concentrated GO dispersions, such as the application of heat21 or the use of vacuum equipment22, are time consuming and laborious. An innovative method was implemented in this work to quickly produce nematic GO dispersions (Fig. 1). We used superabsorbent polymer hydrogel beads (typically, cross-linked polyacrylate based copolymer), which are strongly hydrophilic. Concentration of a GO dispersion occurs because the hydrogel beads absorb and retain water23 without dissolving in water or absorbing GO sheets. This is demonstrated in Raman characterization in Supplementary Fig. 1 (Supplementary Note 1)the characteristic peaks of GO were not observed
0.25 mg ml1 20 mg ml1
Add beads
Repeat until desired concentration
Remove swollen beads
Figure 1 | Procedure for concentrating GO. Photographs of stable dispersions of GO which have been concentrated by adding hydrogel beads.
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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10891 ARTICLE
within the hydrogel beads swollen in a GO suspension. The time taken to concentrate a GO dispersion depends on the initial concentration, the desired concentration and the mass of beads used. Fig. 2a shows a GO dispersion with a concentration of 40 mg ml 1.
Rheological characterization of GO dispersions. Rheological properties of the GO dispersions are crucial to our fabrication method. We evaluated zero-shear viscosity by measuring the viscosity of the GO dispersions at a shear rate of 0.001 s 1 (ref. 24). Fig. 2b demonstrates that the zero-shear viscosity increases with an increase in GO concentration. At low concentrations of GO, water molecules are attached to GO sheets via hydrogen bonds25, but similar to water-clay dispersions26, an increase in the number of GO sheets results in the assembly of graphene sheets and water molecules to form a three-dimensional network via hydrogen bonding, which decreases the uidity of the dispersion. Furthermore, the large changes in the viscosity beyond 5 mg ml 1 coincides with the onset of liquid crystalline nematic phase16. Fig. 2c presents apparent viscosity of the GO dispersion (Z) as a function of shear rate (g). The non-Newtonian
shear-thinning (pseudoplastic) behaviour was observed at different concentrations of the GO dispersion. Decreased viscosity of the GO dispersions with an increase in the shear rates is consistent with previous reports18,27. One can presume that the nematic phases in the GO dispersion are distributed randomly and do not align at low shear rates, which results in higher viscosity. At high shear rates, the randomly distributed nematic phases align in the direction of shear stress and produces less physical interaction with each other, resulting in decreased viscosity. Fig. 2c shows that the viscosity of the GO dispersions were in good agreement with the power law viscosity model. In the power law model, the exponent for ideal plastic material is 1 and any deviation from this theoretical
value shows a loss of plastic behaviour28. The exponents decrease from 0.580 to 0.867 by increasing GO concentration from
10 to 40 mg ml 1, which afrms the increased plasticity arising from the nematic GO phases.
Interfacial properties of GO dispersion. Properties of the GO dispersion, typically at the solidliquid interface, also assume importance in our membrane fabrication process. Several
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Figure 2 | Fabrication of shear-aligned membrane from nematic GO. (a) Viscoelastic property of GO (B40 mg ml 1). Scale bar, 1 cm. (b) Zero-shear viscosity of the dispersions increases with increasing GO concentration. Dashed line is a polynomial t. (c) Rheology data for three different concentration showing shear-thinning behavior. Solid curves are the t of the experimental data with a power law model. (d) Schematic of shear-alignment processing of a nematic GO to a lm; L is the width of blade, h0 is the height of the channel, H is the height of the uid in front of the blade and U is the processing speed. (e) Polarized light images of fully nematic GO at 40 mg ml 1 (scale bar, 1 mm). (f) The red circle in the photograph identes dewetting spots in the
SAMs, which is eliminated when processed from liquid crystalline GO (scale bars, 1 cm). (g) An SEM image demonstrates continuity and conformity of SAM over a porous Nylon substrate (scale bar, 1 mm). (h) Photograph of the gravure printing machine and (inset) images of 13 14 cm2 GO membranes
with different thicknesses. (i,j) AFM height map and corresponding height proles of our membrane (scale bar, 1 mm).
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10891
criteria need to be satised to ensure accurate measurement of the surface tension and the contact angle29,30: the droplet has to be symmetric along the central vertical axis, the droplet should be shaped only by gravity and surface tension forces and no other forces such as viscosity should play a role in the motion or inertia of the droplet. Droplets formed by 40 and 60 mg ml 1
GO dispersions did not satisfy these criteria due to high viscosity, so the surface tension and contact angle values were estimated by linear extrapolation (Supplementary Tables 1 and 2) for these two cases. The argument for using linear extrapolation for these dispersions is that the surface tension of GO dispersions decreases with increase in GO concentration given that GO possesses surfactant-like properties31. The contact angle between the GO dispersion and the Nylon substrate decreases with decreasing surface tension, which is consistent with inverse correlation between contact angle and surface tension in the Youngs equations26:
cos y /
1gLA 1
where, y is contact angle between the GO dispersion and a Nylon substrate, and gLA is the interfacial surface tension of the GO dispersions.
Membrane fabrication. The primary goal of our work is to form large-area GO membranes by taking advantage of the discotic nematic phase of GO by a shear-induced, industrially adaptable liquid thin lm process (Fig. 2d) referred to in this article as shear-aligned membrane (SAM). The discotic nematic colloidal phase (Fig. 2e) has a crucial role in enabling membrane formation, which goes beyond the requirements of high solid contents necessary to produce a continuous lm. The GO colloidal dispersion used in our studies undergoes an isotropic to nematic phase transition at B5 mg ml 1, remaining bi-phasic until B15 mg ml 1, and fully nematic phases are formed at higher concentrations beyond 16 mg ml 1 (ref. 16). Typical physical properties of the GO colloidal suspensions representing isotropic, bi-phasic and fully nematic phases are shown in Table 1.
The nematically ordered uid phases of GO have non-Newtonian ow characteristics (Fig. 2b,c), which can be harnessed to produce large-area lms by using shear forces as in doctor blading and dip coating3234. Our choice of a rigid blade (known as doctor blade in industrial terminology) as the shear alignment method is dictated by factors including its use in large-scale, continuous, high-speed, liquid thin lm processes as the metering, applicator gadget and wide-scale use in preparing polymeric lms35. The size of a membrane that one can produce is limited only by the size of the shearing apparatus, thus large-area membranes can be produced with relative ease. We also hypothesize that the high shear stress will orientate the graphene sheets of nematic discotic phase17,36, packing them into a dense, continuous, uniform membrane over a porous support in
a rapid single step (Fig. 2d). To investigate this, we initially used a lab-scale doctor blade that spreads the uid under Couette ow through a thin rectangular channel (Supplementary Fig. 2 and Note 2). The viscosity of the uid is the dominant material parameter in the imposed shear stress: Z Uh0, where t
is shear stress, Z is viscosity of the GO dispersion, U is process speed and h0 is the doctor blade gap size (Fig. 2d). GO uids from0.1 to 60 mg ml 1 were studied with systematic variation of viscosity. Photographs (Figs 2f and 3a) and scanning electron microscopic (SEM) images (Figs 2g and 3b) revealed that the uniformity of the cast lm increased with increasing GO concentrations. The lms made by 40 and 60 mg ml 1 GO suspensions have best uniformity and continuity. To demonstrate the prociency of our approach in membrane production, we made large-area GO membranes (40 mg ml 1) by a gravure printer (Supplementary Movie 1), with thicknesses ranging from B65 to B360 nm, on porous Nylon substrates.
Although several methods using solution chemistry or energetic radiation can be used to chemically reduce the membranes, as a proof-of-concept to stabilize the membranes in aqueous environment, we partially reduced the GO membranes by exposure (B5 min) to hydrazine vapour37,38.
Nanoltration performance. Performances of the membranes as a function of membrane thickness were rst evaluated by measuring the water permeability (using Reverse Osmosis water, known as RO water) and the retention for Methyl Red (an electroneutral probe molecule at pHB5.5 (ref. 39); Fig. 4a,b).
Membranes with B150 nm thickness were found to exhibit the most promising trade-off between ux and retention. Consequently, the SAMs with B150 nm thickness was chosen for further characterizations. We have compared performance of the SAM with those prepared using the vacuum ltration technique2,1214. Different thicknesses of GO membranes were prepared by changing the volume of the GO solution (10 mg l 1) in the vacuum ltration process. These GO membranes were further reduced via hydrazine vapour following the same methodology used for SAM. We compared the water permeability and the retention of methyl red, a probe molecule that is electroneutral at the experimental pH (B5.5)39, for the SAM and the vacuum ltration membranes, with varying membrane thickness, measured here by AFM (Fig. 2i,j). While it is not surprising that the retention is enhanced, the water permeability is also improved as a result of the stacking order in the SAM. Water ux versus pressure measurements for three different varieties of membrane: SAM, vacuum ltered and a commercial membrane (NF270 membrane, Dow Chemical Company, USA) are shown in Fig. 5a. The SAM had a water permeability of 715 l m 2 hr 1 bar 1, which is almost seven times better than vacuum ltration membranes (102 l m 2 hr 1 bar 1) and almost nine times better than the NF270 membrane while demonstrating comparable or better retention for the electroneutral probemethyl red (Fig. 4b).
Table 1 | Physical properties of GO dispersion.
Concentration (mg ml 1)
Volume fraction
Surface tension (mN m 1)
Contact angle ()
Zero-shear viscosity (at 10 3 s 1) (Pa s)
Apparent viscosity (at 104 s 1) (Pa s)
Dewetting time (s)
Drying time (s)
0.1 0.005 71.9 81 0.00128 0.0016 0.012 40 5 0.27 68 70 0.0094 0.002 0.151 40 10 0.55 66 67 0.8 0.0041 15 40 40 2.22 49 49 66 0.0164 4313 40
Physical properties of a typical isotropic (0.1 mg ml 1), onset of bi-phasic (5 mg ml 1), bi-phasic (10 mg ml 1) and fully nematic (40 mg ml 1) colloidal dispersions of graphene oxide (GO) demonstrating a decrease in surface tension and contact angle which promotes wetting of the uid on the porous substrate and an increase in dewetting time compared with drying time.
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a
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Viscosity: 2.9 Pa s Viscosity: 5 Pa s Viscosity: 66 Pa s Viscosity: 311 Pa s
Viscosity: 0.0016 Pa s Viscosity: 0.0094 Pa s
10 mg ml1
Viscosity: 0.8 Pa s
Surface tension: 66 mN m1
Surface tension: 71.9 mN m1
Surface tension: 69.6 mN m1 Surface tension: 68 mN m1
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Figure 3 | Effect of GO concentration on uniformity and continuity of lm. (a) Photographs (scale bars are 1 cm) and (b) SEM images (scale bars, 50 mm) of top surface of the shear-aligned membranes cast by progressively increasing concentration: (1) 0.1 mg ml 1, (2) 2.5 mg ml 1, (3) 5 mg ml 1, (4) 10 mg ml 1, (5) 15 mg ml 1, (6) 20 mg ml 1, (7) 40 mg ml 1, (8) 60 mg ml 1.
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Figure 4 | Comparision of SAM and vacuum ltration membrane performance. (a) Water permeability versus thickness, and (b) Retention of methyl red, an electroneutral probe molecule. Inset of b is the structure of the methyl red. Error bars in these gures are from ve measurements showing the maximum and minimum values.
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Figure 5 | Filtration performance. (a) Water ux versus applied pressure for three different membranes: SAM (red) with a thickness of 15015 nm, vacuum ltration (blue) with a thickness of 17020 nm, and NF270, a commercial nanoltration membrane (green). SAM showed a retention of 902% for methyl red, while the vacuum ltration membrane and NF270 showed 505% and 901.5% retention, respectively. (b) Retention performance of the 15015 nm thick shear-aligned membrane, as a function of hydrated radius, for probe molecules with different charges and sizes. (MV is methyl viologen, MR is methyl red, MnB is methylene blue, MO is methyl orange, OG is orange G, Ru is Tris (bipyridine) runthenium (II) chloride, RB is Rhodamine B, RosB is Rose Bengal, MB is methylene blue, BB is brilliant blue. The green, red and blue symbols represent electroneutral, negatively and positively charged probe molecules, respectively. (c) Retention details of the membrane for the probe molecules. (d) Salt retention by the 15015 nm thick SAM, for four different salt solutions. Error bars in these gures are from ve measurements showing the maximum and minimum values.
The ux through the membrane increases linearly with increasing applied pressure (Fig. 5a). The modied Hagen-
Poiseuille equation for slit-shaped pores13 (Flux
h4DP 12L2ZDx) gives
an approximate explanation of uid ow through these multilayered structures. Using this equation one can estimate the mass ow rate of a Newtonian uid through porous materials per unit area (m3 s 1 m 2), where h (m) B0.95 10 9 is the distance
between neighbouring graphene sheets (estimated from X-ray diffraction, Supplementary Fig. 3), DP 0.5 105 Pa is the
pressure gradient, L 0.9 10 6 m is the average lateral length
of the graphene sheets, Z 0.001 Pa s is the viscosity of water at
20 C, and Dx 150 10 9 m is the thickness of the membrane.
Comparison of the experimental results with estimated uxes from the modied Hagen-Poiseuille equation reveal that the theoretical uxes are four orders of magnitude smaller than the experimental results. This experimental enhancement is consistent with reports of water transport in nanotubes40 and the slit-pores of graphene2,13.
We evaluated the retention of this membrane for different probe molecules with different charges and hydrated radii; Methyl Viologen (positive charge, at pH 6), Methyl Orange (negative charge at pH 6), Methylene Blue (positive charge at pH6.5), Orange G (negative charge at pH 6), Rhodamine B (electroneutral at pH 6 (electroneutral at pH 6), Tris(bipyridine) ruthenium(II) chloride (Ruthenium II) (positive charge at pH 6), Methyl Blue (negative charge at pH 6), Brilliant Blue (negative
charge at pH 6.5) and Rose Bengal (negative charge at pH 6) (Fig. 5b). Before every experiment, the membranes are cleaned with ethanol, acetone and RO water followed by permeation of RO water until a stable permeability is observed. It is noteworthy that the cleaning process removed most of the probe molecules adhering to the membrane surface and almost 100% recovery of ux (Fig. 6a,b) is observed. Retention mechanism in membranes are reliant on size sieving, electrostatic repulsion and adsorption41,42, usually acting in tandem to affect separations. Sorption may dominate separations based on graphene-based materials43, so it is necessary to identify which of these mechanisms are crucial in our membrane. To calculate observation retention, R, (equation (2)) and the percentage of adsorption (equation (3)), we measured the concentration of each probe molecule in the feed (Cf), the permeate (Cp) and the retentate (Cr)44 evaluated by measuring the absorbance of the relevant peaks using a ultravioletvisible spectrometer.
R %
Cf Cp
Cf 100 %
2
Ads: %
VfCf VrCr VpCp
VfCf 100 %
3 The membrane showed high retention (490%) for the charged and uncharged solutes with a hydrated radius above 5 (Fig. 5b). Fig. 5c reports the analysis of feed, retentate and permeate concentration along with percentage retention and percentage
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a b
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Figure 6 | Flux regeneration in SAM. (a) Permeability declined during the ltration tests with probe molecules. The results show that a maximum of 10% decline is observed, it is larger for small molecules (methyl viologen B10% reduction), and less for bigger probe molecules (B4.2% for methyl blue and brilliant blue) consistent with minimal sorption effects. Error bars are from ve measurements showing the maximum and minimum values.
(b) Photographs of the membrane before (1) and after ltration (2) of methyl red, and after the cleaning process (3) which shows regeneration of the parent-membrane surface (scale bar, 1 cm). (c) Demonstration of long-term viability, low-fouling behaviour of the membranes during ltration of BSA and ux recovery after chemical cleaning in ve cycles. Each cycle commences with RO water permeation (Blue symbols), followed by permeation of BSA (Green symbols). Error bars in these gures are from ve measurements showing the maximum and minimum values.
adsorption in all the experiments. The results show that the retentate concentration is always larger than the feed concentration, while the adsorption percentage is o10%, irrespective of the probe molecule species in consideration. The permeability during ltration of the probe molecule was usually 9095% of their clean water permeability (Fig. 6a) further supporting minimum sorption. Based on these measurements, one can argue that SAMs primarily sieve molecules when the average interlayer space of the graphene sheets approaches the physical size of the probe molecules, reported here as hydrated radius. It is also worth noting that the negatively charged probe molecules have higher retention than the positively charged molecules suggesting that electrostatic effects are also important.
Salt retention. We evaluated the retention of monovalent and divalent salts (Na2SO4, MgSO4, MgCl2 and NaCl) at a concentration of 2 g l 1. The membrane showed retention between 3040% for all the salts (Fig. 5d). The salt retention capability of the membrane is not surprising as the interlayer spacing is small (B9.5 ) and the membrane is abundant with various negatively charged oxygen functional groups, such as carboxyl, hydroxyl and epoxy, which persist even after the mild reduction used in stabilizing the membrane (Supplementary Fig. 4). These negatively charged groups particularly carboxylic acids, based on Donnan exclusion theory, will repel co-ions, and consequently retain counter ions to keep electroneutrality of the solution on each side of the membrane.
Long-term ltration tests. A key attribute of our membrane is the stability in aqueous environments and that the retention is
affected by sieving on the top surface of the membrane (Fig. 6b). This allows the membrane to be cleaned in polar and non-polar solvents for multiple reuse. Long-term ltration tests (over 24 h at0.5 bar pressure) were carried out with BSA, a common laboratory model foulant in membrane-fouling studies4547. The SAM showed fouling resistance and ux was recovered by a simple solvent cleaning (Fig. 6c). The fouling behaviour of membrane strongly depends on physical and chemical characteristics of the membrane surface such as pore size, porosity, pore morphology and most importantly the hydrophobicity48,49. Fortunately, our membrane retain hydrophilic groups (Supplementary Fig. 4) that decreases hydrophobic interaction with the organic probes and proteins47,48. As a result, a simple cleaning procedure using ethanol, acetone and RO water effectively recovered more than 90% of the ux after every cleaning cyclethis was true for the probe molecules and also for stronger foulant such as BSA (Fig. 6ac).
Homogeneity of large-area membrane. To demonstrate the homogeneity of the large-area membrane, four pieces were incised from a single large-area membrane and their performance was evaluated. (Supplementary Fig. 5). RO water permeability and retention of each individual membrane is shown in Supplementary Table 3. It is seen that each of these membranes have almost similar performance in water permeability (mean76.25 l m 2 hr 1 bar 1 and s.d. of 5.7) and Methyl
Red rejection (mean91% and s.d. of 3) using methodology reported in the manuscript. These numbers are excellent evidence for the homogeneity of the large-area membrane.
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DiscussionThe underlying principles of uid-physics necessary for fabricating uniform and continuous graphene-based membranes by shear-induced alignment of liquid crystals of GO and the role of stacking order in enhancing water permeability is now discussed. The uniformity and continuity of the membrane arises from a competition between two factors: the casting of a uniform liquid lm and then maintaining the stability of the liquid lm during drying. The GO dispersions are shear-thinning, pseudoplastic uids27,50 especially in high volume fractions and are highly viscous in zero-shear and very thin at high shear rate (Fig. 2b,c)this is instrumental in obtaining a uniform membrane by shear alignment. For example, a GO dispersion at 40 mg ml 1 would have a zero-shear viscosity of 66 Pa s, but at a shear rate of 104 s 1, relevant to our process, it will decrease to0.0164 Pa s meaning that the nematic phase becomes uid when forced under the micron scale outlet of the blade; membrane formation is also accentuated by the smaller surface tension and smaller contact angle of the nematic uid (Table 1) to wet the underlying porous membrane. To obtain a uniform membrane it is critical to ensure that the processed liquid lm from the GO dispersions remains uniform and continuous until it dries. If for any reason, the liquid lm moves or migrates on the substrate, dewetting may ensue and the uniformity and continuity of the lm degrades26,51,52 (Figs 2f and 3). Then to maintain stability of the liquid lm during drying, the lm needs to resist dewetting. In general, dewetting occurs on nonwettable substrates and can also be initiated by various lm-thinning mechanisms, which persist until holes are produced and the lm is ruptured. A large number of factors inuence dewetting, such as solvent evaporation (especially in the case of low concentration dispersions), electrostatic repulsion (or attraction) forces between the dispersion and the substrate, dispersion migration due to gravity or capillary-driven ow, lm thickness and viscosity and
surface tension gradients. Among all lm-thinning mechanisms, the predominant factor for dewetting is low viscosity and high surface tension of the dispersion51,53. The dewetting time can be estimated by tdewet
mL ksy3
34,54, where tdewet is the dewetting
time (s), s(N m 1) and m (Pa s) are the surface tension and the viscosity of the dispersion, respectively, and y (rad) is the contact angle between the dispersion and the substrate. k is a constant related to the uid property and is assumed to be 10 3 for water-based system34,54. L is the length scale, which is estimated as 10% of the substrate width34. Drying time is the time between casting the liquid lm and its solidication, which is dened by tdry DhJ0, where Dh is a parameter estimated to 80% of the
thickness of the liquid lm34 and J0 is the solvent evaporation current (cm s 1). To avoid rupture and obtain a continuous and uniform lm, the drying time must be lower than the dewetting time. J0 was calculated by recording the mass loss of the liquid lm on drying. The volume of the liquid lm was calculated by considering the density of GO (B1.8 g ml 1)55, using the mass and concentration of the GO dispersion. Dividing the volume with the area of the liquid lm, we obtained the thickness of the liquid lm during drying and subsequently calculated J0 (2 10 6 cm s 1). With increasing GO concentration, because
of the enhanced zero-shear viscosity, lower surface tension and increase in the contact angle, the dewetting time-scale of the nematic uids can be easily increased by over six orders of magnitude (Table 1). In fact, the dewetting time increased from0.012 to 4,313 s with an increase in GO concentration from 0.1 to 40 mg ml 1 (Table 1). Since the drying time (40 s) in case of 40 mg ml 1 GO dispersion was signicantly lower than the dewetting time (4313 s), uniform lms could be produced under these conditions. Optical images and SEM in Fig. 3 conrm that dewetting in the lms formed from such high concentrations is prohibited.
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Figure 7 | Effect of stacking of GO sheets on performance of ltration membranes. Polarized light imaging results of (ac) SAM and (df) vacuum ltration membrane. (a,d) Falsely coloured polarized light images, where the hue represents the azimuth as depicted by the legend (scale bars are 50 mm).
Regions with the same hue represent the same azimuth angle, so the SAMs have higher in-plane stacking order while vacuum ltration membranes have lower stacking order. This is supported by their slow axis vector representations (b,e), which are expanded view of the boxed areas (scale bar, 10 mm), polar histograms of the azimuth angles and the in-plane order parameters (c,f). (c,f) Predicted organization of graphene sheets in membranes.
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Shear-aligned membrane
Vacuum ltration membrane
Intensity (a.u.)
5 7 9 11 13 15
2 (degrees)
Figure 8 | X-ray diffraction charactrization of SAM and vacuum ltration membrane. X-ray diffraction patterns of SAM and vacuum ltration membranes demonstrate highly ordered lamellar structure for SAM.
To elucidate the role of stacking order of graphene sheets, SAM and the vacuum ltration membrane are contrasted. Two independent techniques, polarized light imaging (Fig. 7af) and X-ray diffraction (Fig. 8) were used to conrm the ordering of the GO sheets. Polarized light imaging measures the local orientation order by imaging the slow axis of alignment of the graphene sheets in the plane of the membrane, while X-ray diffraction measures the crystalline order of the interlayer spacing. Polarized light imaging technique has been widely used for order parameter characterization of molecules and particles56,57 as well as GO sheets in liquids16,18,58 or solid state lms33. We have compared the optical anisotropy of SAM with those synthesized by vacuum ltration2,1214. Figs 7a,d show the processed false colour images of the azimuth orientation of the GO assemblies for SAM and vacuum ltration membranes where the hue represents the azimuth angle33. Similarly, Figs 7b,e display the vector representation of the azimuth angle. In comparison with the vacuum ltration membrane, a distinctly uniform hue (also represented as orientated azimuth vectors) was observed for SAM, suggesting that they exhibit a higher orientation order. We have used a scalar parameter, S, for the distribution of the azimuth angles in the xy plane to quantify the alignment of the GO sheets. The scalar parameter is dened by S 12 o3cos2y 14 (ref. 59), where y is the angle between the
mean azimuth (the director axis) and the azimuth at each pixel (the long axis of each graphene sheet). S 1 represents parallel
alignment with the director and a perfectly oriented system, whereas S 0 represents a system with completely
random orientations. SAM exhibit S values of B0.99, whereas vacuum-ltered membranes showed B0.3, demonstrating the high degree of in-plane order for SAM.
In addition, the X-ray diffraction patterns revealed that the broad range of interlayer space of GO sheets in vacuum ltration membrane contrasted with a narrow range for SAM (Fig. 8). This X-ray diffraction data is in good agreement with the results obtained by LC-PolScope (LPS) imaging and supports the conclusion that the lamellar structure of SAM are more organized and ordered than those obtained from vacuum ltration (Fig. 7af). Interestingly, the graphene sheets that comprise the lm have a lateral dimension of B900 nm, while the membrane
itself is much thinner (Fig. 2g and i)this strongly suggests that the shear stress orients the sheets into the plane of the substrate. The in-plane orientation of the graphene sheets is consistent with theories of ow alignment of discotic nematic liquid crystals under a shear ow eld17,36. This remarkably high order is unique to our processing approach and the key distinction of our shear-alignment method with other processing approach2,1214 (Figs 7 and 8). We believe that the enhanced performance of our membrane is a consequence of the highly ordered graphene channels in the membrane plane. These highly ordered graphene sheets make well-organized and precise channels in the plane of the membrane that facilitate water transport60. In disordered membranes, the graphene sheets have random orientation that leads to disordered channels with broad range of sizes (Fig. 8). The random orientation of the graphene sheets could introduce multiple effects, such as, increased tortuosity, mechanical roughness and chaotic interconnectivity between GO sheets, which as a result increase the ow resistance of a membrane.
In summary, we have utilized the ow properties of a nematic GO uid in developing a rapid and scalable process to produce large-area, thin, uniform and continuous graphene-based membranes supported on porous substrates. The shear-alignment process introduces large in-plane order and stacking periodicity in the graphene-based lms. This structural order is found to enhance water ux dramatically while facilitating retention of organic molecules and ions by molecular sieving and electrostatic repulsion. The large-area graphene-based membranes produced by shear alignment have higher ux than commercially available Dow Filmtec NF270 membranes and excellent ux recovery by simple solvent cleaning. These membranes are ideal candidates for highly desirable low-pressure, low-fouling, membrane-based nanoltration separations.
Methods
Synthesis of GO dispersions. GO was synthesized using modied Hummers method61. SP-1 grade 325 mesh graphite powder (Bay Carbon, Inc.), sulfuric acid, potassium persulfate, phosphorus pentoxide and potassium permanganate (Sigma-Aldrich), were used for the synthesis. The synthesized GO was exfoliated by sonication (UP-100 Ultrasonic processor) in RO water for 1 h, followed by centrifugation to remove the un-exfoliated GO. The average lateral size of the GO sheets was determined using a SEM (FEI Nova NanoSEM 450 FEGSEM (2012)) and was estimated to be B0.90.4 mm (90 sheets were measured to calculate the average sheet size). An Ocean Optics USB4000 ultravioletvisible spectrometer was used to determine the GO concentrations by measuring the absorbance at 230 nm (using a quartz cuvette, Starna Cells Pty. Ltd, Australia). Various concentrations of GO dispersions were prepared using a superabsorbent polymer (cross-linked polyacrylate copolymer based hydrogel beads, Demi Co., Ltd, China). For example, within B1 h, a 10 ml GO dispersion with a concentration of 20 mg ml 1 was obtained from a 1 l suspension of 0.25 mg ml 1 GO using 10 g of the hydrogel beads. To avoid possible concentration polarization around the beads and to speed up the absorbent process the container was mildly agitated by a magnetic stirrer. After the hydrogel beads were saturated with water, they were removed from the concentrated solution. The GO deposits adhering to the surface of the saturated beads were removed by washing them with RO water. The saturated hydrogel beads could be reused after drying them at 50 C overnight.
Raman spectroscopy. The GO sample was prepared by drop casting of GO(5 mg ml 1) on glass slide followed by drying overnight under ambient lab conditions. The saturated hydrogel beads (swollen in either 5 mg ml 1 of GO or in pure RO water) were cut by a stainless steel scalpel blade and mounted onto a glass slide. Raman spectra of GO and of the swollen hydrogel beads were obtained using a Renishaw Confocal micro-Raman Spectrometer equipped with a HeNe(632.8 nm) laser operating at 10% power. Extended scans (10 s) were performed between 100 and 3,200 wave numbers with a laser spot size of 1 mm. Once the background was removed, the intensity of the spectra was normalized by dividing the data with the maximum intensity. The peak positions were found using the full-width at half-maximum, as is common practice for analysing spectral data.
Rheological measurements. A HAAKE MARS II Rheometer (Thermo Electron Corporation, Germany) was used to measure the viscosity of GO dispersions. A titanium coated cone-plate with a 60 mm diameter and a cone angle of 1 was used. The temperature inside the cone-plate was xed to 22.000.01 C by using a
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Peltier system and a thermostat HAAKE Phoenix II (Thermo Electron Corporation). The experiments were performed using 2 ml dispersions with a constant gap of 0.041 mm. We evaluated zero-shear viscosity by measuring the viscosity of the GO dispersions at a shear rate of 0.001 s 1 (ref. 24).
Surface tension and contact angle measurements. A custom-designed pendent drop apparatus62 was used to measure the surface tension of the GO dispersions as a function of the concentration. A drop was formed at the end of a capillary with0.7 mm diameter, and a digital CMOS camera monitored the shape of the droplet. A customized software62 determined the surface tension of these dispersions by comparing the actual curvature with the theoretically predicted curvature of the droplet estimated by YoungLaplace correlation62. The static contact angles between the GO dispersions and the Nylon substrates were measured by placing a droplet of a GO dispersion (B3 ml of volume) on a Nylon substrate using a capillary with a diameter of 0.7 mm. The digital camera was used to monitor the shape of the droplet immediately after the droplet deposition. The average value of the contact angle was determined from the measurements of the contact angles at ve different locations on a Nylon substrate.
Lab-scale membrane fabrication by doctor blade. To evaluate lm stability and dewetting phenomena and obtain the optimal conditions required for production of a continuous GO lm, a simple lab-scale doctor blade (MTI Corporation, USA) was used for various GO concentrations. The doctor blade has a rectangular outlet formed between the blade and the substrate, through which the movable blade spreads the GO dispersion on the substrate (Fig. 1d). The doctor blade gap size was B1 mm and the casting speed was B1 cm s 1. Typically, to prepare a GO lm,1 ml of a GO dispersion was spread over a porous Nylon substrate (Nylon 66 membrane, pore size 0.2 mm, 5 5 cm2, MDI, India) using the doctor blade. A
syringe pump was used to precisely control the movement of the doctor blade. Subsequently, the resultant liquid lms were dried overnight under ambient conditions.
Semi-industrial scale membrane fabrication. Large-area, continuous, supported GO membranes were prepared using a conventional gravure printing machine (Labratester, Norbert Schlai Machinery Company, Switzerland; Fig. 2h). To produce GO membranes, small quantities of GO dispersion were placed on the printing plate, which was spread by a doctor blade. Subsequently, a rubber-coated roller pressed the substrate on to the printing plate and transferred the liquid lm from the printing plate to the substrate (Supplementary Movie 1). GO membranes were prepared using GO dispersions (40 mg ml 1) and 13 14 cm2 porous Nylon
substrates (Nylon 66, pore size 0.2 mm, MDI, India). GO membranes with different thicknesses were prepared by repeating the printing process several times on the same substrate.
Membrane fabrication by vacuum ltration. We used a 10 mg l 1 GO solution (from same stock of GO) and ltered it through the same porous Nylon support (Nylon 66, pore size 0.2 mm, MDI, India) using a vacuum ltration pump(KNF pump, model: N 810(3) FT.18). Different thicknesses of membrane were made by changing the volume of the GO solution.
Polarized light imaging. Microscopy was carried out using a Leica DM IRB microscope with a LPS Abrio imaging system from CRI, Inc. (ref. 33) LPS imaging required GO membranes to be transferred onto glass slides. Nylon substrates supporting the GO membranes were etched using concentrated hydrochloric acid and the obtained free-standing GO membrane was transferred to a microscope glass slide. The order parameter, S, was calculated from the azimuth data(1,000 pixels).
X-ray diffraction. X-ray diffraction patterns of the GO membranes were obtained using a Phillips 1140 diffractometer with Cu Ka line generated at 40 kV and 25 mA at a scan rate of 1 min 1, and a step size of 0.02. X-ray diffraction samples were prepared by etching the Nylon substrates with concentrated hydrochloric acid (Sigma-Aldrich) and by transferring the free-standing GO lms on glass slides.
Scanning electron microscopy. The uniformity and continuity of these GO lms were then analyzed by a high resolution SEM (FEI Nova NanoSEM 450 FEGSEM (2012)), typically operating at 5 keV. All the samples were coated with Iridium by a Cressington 208 HR sputter coater. For cross-sectional imaging, the Nylon supported GO lms were cut into rectangular strips, which were soaked in liquid nitrogen for 30 s and were then carefully snapped with at tweezers. Cross-sections were mounted vertically on a metal stub and imaged at 15 keV.
Atomic force microscopy. Free-standing GO membranes were prepared by etching nylon substrates in concentrated hydrochloric acid (Sigma-Aldrich). Subsequently, these free-standing GO lms were transferred to microscope glass slides. Atomic force microscopy measurements were carried out using a JPK
Nanowizard 3 to calculate the thickness of GO membranes. This instrument is equipped with capacitive sensors to ensure accurate reporting of height, z and xy lateral distances. Imaging was performed in tapping mode using a Bruker NCHV model cantilevers with diameter 10 nm, with nominal resonant frequencies of 340 Hz, spring constant of 20 80 N m 1. Images were obtained with a set-point
force of 1 nN. The cantilever drive frequency was chosen to be 5% smaller than the resonance frequency. The thickness of the GO lms were estimated from the height difference between the glass and the GO lms from three different positions using a line scan as is shown in Fig. 2i for the membrane with a thickness of 15015 nm.
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. To evaluate the presence of functional groups in the GO membrane and partially reduced membrane, FTIR spectra of the membranes were recorded using an attenuated total reectance Fourier transform infrared (PerkinElmer, USA) in the range of 500 4,000 cm 1 at an average of 32
scans with a resolution of 4 cm 1.
Nanoltration characterization of the membranes. The SAMs were cut into the required size (47 mm diameter) for ltrations tests. To increase the water stability of the SAMs, they were partially reduced by exposing to 0.02 ml of hydrazine hydrate vapour (88%, Merck) for 5 min by placing a hermetically sealed vessel containing the GO membrane onto a hot-plate at 60 C. The water permeability and retention capabilities of the membranes were examined using a commercial bench-scale stainless steel dead-end stirred cell-ltration unit (Sterlitech HP4750; Supplementary Fig. 6). The effective membrane area was B13.6 cm2 and all the experiments were performed at ambient conditions (B21 C) with a nitrogen pressure of 0.5 bar. Permeability of the membrane (with units 1 h 1 m 2 bar 1)
for pure water or water/probe molecule solutions was determined after a constant ux was obtained, typically after 1 h of permeation, and calculated by:
Permeability
Vpt:A:DP 4 Where Vp is the permeate volume, t is the permeation time, A is the active area of the membrane and DP is the imposed nitrogen pressure. To evaluate the retention performance of the membrane the stirred cell was lled with 10 mg l 1 of the test solutions. To diminish the role of adsorption, the membrane were pre-saturated by ltering B20 ml of the test solution and then, to remove any solute adhered to the membrane surfaces, the membranes were thoroughly washed with ethanol, acetone and nally RO water (typically 50 ml of the solvent was added to the ltration cell and left stirring at 800 r.p.m. for 5 min). The retention performance of the membranes were evaluated by lling the cell with 100 ml of solution followed by applying a pressure to the membrane and allowing 20 ml to permeate through it. The 20 ml, which permeated through the membrane, and the 80 ml retentate were both collected and analysed. All tests were repeated ve times. For accurate estimation of the concentration of the probe molecule in the retentate stream, we rinsed all the components which were in contact with the retentate solution in the ltration cell, such as, the stirring apparatuses, interior walls of the cell and the top surface of the membranes with 100 ml of RO water and accounted for during calculation of the retentate concentration.
Salt retention performance. The salt retention performance of the GO membrane was examined by evaluating the retention of the selected monovalent and divalent salts, such as, Na2SO4, MgSO4, MgCl2 and NaCl, with a concentration of 2 g l 1.
The ltration tests were performed using the same dead-end cell, with a nitrogen pressure of 0.5 bar. To minimize the concentration polarization effect on the retention performance, the feed solution was stirred at 800 r.p.m. during the ltration. The tests were started by recording the permeability of the membranes for RO water until a stable condition was achieved (typically after 1 h). Subsequently, RO water is replaced by 50 ml of the salt solution. The salt retention performance of the membranes were evaluated by ltering 10 ml of the initial feed. Before every experiment, the membrane was cleaned by ltering RO water through them until the permeability became stable and also evidence of salts were observed (typically after 1 h) in the permeate. The retention performances of the membrane for the salts were calculated using the equation (2). The concentrations of the salts were measured by an ion conductivity metre (TPS Aqua C, Thermo Fisher Scientic).
Long-term viability and membrane reuse. To evaluate the long-term viability and the reusability of our membranes, we have ltered 100 p.p.m. of BSA. The fouling tests were performed in the dead-end stirred ltration cell (Sterlitech HP4750) attached with a 4.5 l dispensing vessel, under constant stirring at800 r.p.m. (to minimize concentration polarization) and a nitrogen pressure of0.5 bar. The test was started by recording permeability of the membrane for RO water until a constant ux was obtained, typically after 1 h (jw,1). The initial RO
feed was removed and replaced by the BSA solution. On the commencement of ltration with 0.5 bar pressure, permeate was weighed and collected using a Sartorius scale customized with a Labview interface. This completes the rst cycle. Once the BSA test was completed, the membrane was cleaned by ethanol, acetone and RO water. The ltration of the BSA solution was continued for 5 h (ve cycles). The aforementioned procedure is now repeated again with the second RO water
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permeability designated as jw,2. Five cycles were completed in total (Fig. 6c). Although we understand that industrially relevant cleaning protocols for membranes require the use of alkalis and acids, the choice of the cleaning solution for our studies was based on the ability of the GO membranes to have chemical resistance towards solvents such as acetone and ethanol.
Antifouling behaviour of the SAM due to the chemical cleaning was evaluated by the ux recovery (FR), which is calculated by the following equation:
FRi %
jw;i
jw;1
100 5
Where, jw,1 is the initial ux of the membrane for RO water before the rst cycle, jw,i is the membrane ux (after cleaning the membrane by ethanol and acetone and RO water) for RO water after cycle i.
Estimation of hydrated radius of probe molecules. The hydrated radii of most probe molecules used in this study are not well-known with the exception for Ruthenium II2,63, but the hydration radius is relevant to interpreting our nanoltration studies. Various studies have estimated the hydrated radii of different molecules by using a correlation between more easily obtainable size parameters such as Stokes radius2,64 or crystal radius64, and physical parameters such as viscosity6466 with hydration radius. Here we have estimated the Connolly accessible area (CAA) calculated by Chem3D software, which is similar to the method of Van der Bruggen et al.67 that utilized an energy minimization routine to estimate the molecular size of probes used in nanoltration studies. The CAA is described by the locus of the centre of the solvent molecule (which is considered as a sphere) as it is rolled around the probe molecules van der Waals surface68.
We chose several molecules (in the molecular weight range of our probe molecules) with known hydrated radii to perform the CAA calculation. To calculate the CAA, the structure of the molecules were generated using Chem3D Pro 13.0 (Cambridge-Soft, MA, USA) and the energy minimization was performed by molecular mechanics calculation, using the MM2 method. Once the CAA was determined we calculated the equivalent spherical radius (CAA radius), these values are listed in Supplementary Table 4. Supplementary Fig. 7 shows the correlation between the obtained CAA radius and hydrated radii obtained using this method. We used this correlation to estimate hydrated radius of probe molecules whose hydration radius was unknown.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge funding from the Australian Research Council through an ARC Discovery (DP 110100082), ARC Linkage (LP 140100959) grant and also partial support from University of Kentucky NSF EPSCoR grant. We thank Professor Tam Sridhar and Dr Duc Nguyen for the rheological measurements.
Author contributions
A.A. designed and carried out experiments, analyzed data and co-wrote the article. Other authors participated in the discussion and writing of the manuscript. M.M. supervised the project and wrote the article.
Additional information
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Competing nancial interests: The authors declare that an Australian provisional patent 2014904644 on the synthesis of GO membrane has been led.
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How to cite this article: Akbari, A. et al. Large-area graphene-based nanoltration membranes by shear alignment of discotic nematic liquid crystals of graphene oxide. Nat. Commun. 7:10891 doi: 10.1038/ncomms10891 (2016).
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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Mar 2016
Abstract
Graphene-based membranes demonstrating ultrafast water transport, precise molecular sieving of gas and solvated molecules shows great promise as novel separation platforms; however, scale-up of these membranes to large-areas remains an unresolved problem. Here we demonstrate that the discotic nematic phase of graphene oxide (GO) can be shear aligned to form highly ordered, continuous, thin films of multi-layered GO on a support membrane by an industrially adaptable method to produce large-area membranes (13 × 14 cm2 ) in <5 s. Pressure driven transport data demonstrate high retention (>90%) for charged and uncharged organic probe molecules with a hydrated radius above 5 Å as well as modest (30-40%) retention of monovalent and divalent salts. The highly ordered graphene sheets in the plane of the membrane make organized channels and enhance the permeability (71±5 l m-2 hr-1 bar-1 for 150±15 nm thick membranes).
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