Nanoporous Membranes with Chemically-Tailored Pore Walls from Triblock Terpolymer Templates

POSTER

Abstract

Membranes generated from self-assembled block polymers have shown promise as highly permeable and selective filters; however, current syntheses of such materials lack diverse pore wall chemical functionality. Here, we report the facile synthesis of polyisoprene-$b$-polystyrene-$b$-poly($N,N$-dimethylacrylamide) (PI-PS-PDMA) using a controlled reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization mechanism to yield a macromolecule with an easily-tunable molecular weight and a narrow molecular weight distribution. The PI-PS-PDMA is then cast into an anisotropic membrane using the self-assembly and non-solvent induced phase separation process (SNIPS) protocol. These membranes can be used in size-selective separations for particles as small as 8 nm in diameter. Furthermore, the PDMA block can be converted to poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) readily in the solid state, and this PI-PS-PAA terpolymer membrane can separate particles as low as 2 nm in diameter while still retaining a relatively high flux. This is the smallest reported separation for a block polymer-based membrane to date. Additionally, the PAA-lined pores serve as a conversion platform to be tuned to any other pore chemistry, which allows the membrane to be of great utility in optimizing chemistry-specific separations.

Authors

  • Ryan Mulvenna

    Purdue University

  • Jacob Weidman

    University of Notre Dame

  • John Pople

    Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource

  • Bryan Boudouris

    Purdue University

  • William Phillip

    University of Notre Dame