Covalent organic framework membranes achieving Mg/Li separation by permeating Mg2+ while retaining Li+
M Liu and MJ Wei and G Liu and DW Li and Z Zhang and Y Wang, JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE, 712, 123247 (2024).
DOI: 10.1016/j.memsci.2024.123247
Due to the growing demand for lithium in the new energy industry, significant attention has been focused on developing lithium extraction technologies from salt-lake brine. However, the high Mg/Li ratio in salt-lake brine presents challenges for membrane separation technology. If a membrane can allow Mg2+ and water molecules to pass through while retaining Li+, the retained brine will have concentrated Li+ with a reduced Mg/Li ratio, creating the facilitation of further lithium extraction. In this study, we discovered through non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations that strongly hydrophilic covalent organic frameworks membranes capture Li+ in their pores, preventing additional Li+ from entering the nanopores. Meanwhile, Mg2+ can freely penetrate these nanopores along with water molecules. This adsorption of Li+ and the free permeation of Mg2+ with water molecules result in the effective separation of Li+ and Mg2+. Consequently, the retained brine becomes lithium-rich with reduced Mg/Li ratio. The findings of this work provide valuable guidance for designing nanofiltration membranes for extracting lithium from salt lakes with high Mg/Li ratio.
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