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February 26, 2025

Making clean water more accessible: New membrane filter enhances desalination speed and cost-effectiveness

In the Shaffer lab, the actual membrane that blocks salt and allows water flow through up to eight times faster. Credit: ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acsami.4c14332
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In the Shaffer lab, the actual membrane that blocks salt and allows water flow through up to eight times faster. Credit: ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acsami.4c14332

When you drink a nice refreshing glass of water, do you ever think, "Gee, I'm glad that polymeric desalination membrane did its job!" Probably not, but maybe you should.

Those thin polyamide, or plastic-like, membranes work as filters that turn into fresh drinkable water. The salt-blocking membranes are widely used to turn both slightly salty water (brackish water) and seawater into .

Enter Devin Shaffer, UH assistant professor of civil and . He's developed a breakthrough membrane that lets water flow through up to eight times faster while still keeping out salt, making more efficient and accessible than ever before.

Shaffer's work, in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, addresses the tradeoff between how much water can pass through (permeability) and how well the membrane blocks salt and other impurities (selectivity). If the membrane lets more water through, it may also allow more salt to pass, reducing effectiveness. If it blocks more salt, it may slow down water flow, making the process less efficient and more expensive in systems like and nanofiltration.

Credit: ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acsami.4c14332
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Credit: ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acsami.4c14332

"We have developed a new type of ultrathin polyamide membrane with a unique, contorted structure that creates more open spaces, or enhanced free volume, within the material," reports Shaffer.

"These new ultrathin contorted membranes break that trade-off by letting water through much faster without sacrificing salt rejection, making desalination systems more efficient and cost-effective," he said.

Ultimately, with these new developments, desalination could become even faster and more energy-efficient, lowering costs and making clean water more accessible, Shaffer said.

More information: Sayali Shaligram et al, Highly Permselective Contorted Polyamide Desalination Membranes with Enhanced Free Volume Fabricated by mLbL Assembly, ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2025).

Journal information: ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Provided by University of Houston

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A new ultrathin polyamide membrane has been developed, significantly enhancing desalination efficiency by allowing water to flow up to eight times faster while maintaining effective salt rejection. This innovation addresses the typical trade-off between permeability and selectivity, making desalination systems more cost-effective and accessible. The membrane's unique contorted structure increases free volume, facilitating faster water passage without compromising salt removal.

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