Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, Vol.53, No.48, 18575-18579, 2014
Interfacial Polymerization of Reactive Block Polymers for the Preparation of Composite Ultrafiltration Membranes
Interfacial polymerization of an acid chloride-containing block polymer and a multivalent amine in the presence of a macroporous support was explored as a means to generate a nanoporous thin film composite (TFC) membrane potentially useful for ultrafiltration. When polylactide-b-poly(styrene-co-vinylbenzoyl chloride) (PLA-b-P(S-co-VBC)) in an organic phase and m-phenylenediamine (MPD) in an aqueous phase were used as the reactive block polymer and the amine, respectively, a block polymer thin film was successfully formed on a polysulfone support. This nanostructured film could be converted into a nanoporous layer by subsequent PLA etching under mild basic conditions. While most organic solvents used to dissolve PLA-b-P(S-co-VBC) damaged the support and decreased permeability of the resulting membrane, use of a mixture of methyl isobutyl ketone and acetonitrile produced a TFC membrane with high permeability.