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  1. Bioinspired membranes offer an alternative approach to improving the fouling resistance of commercial membranes for oil separations. Here, two perfluoropolyether oils, a lower viscosity Krytox 103 (K103) and a higher viscosity Krytox 107 (K107), were infused into commercial polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) ultrafiltration membranes to mimic the Nepenthes pitcher plant. The transmembrane pressure required to perform long-term oil permeance tests was optimized by testing the liquid-infused membranes at different applied pressures. Crystal violet staining and variable pressure scanning electron microscopy qualitatively suggest that the oil layer remained on the membranes after the oil separation experiments were conducted. Over 5 cycles, K103- and K107- liquid-infused membranes exhibited a consistent permeance of ∼ 30000 L m-2h−1 bar−1 at 1.0 bar and ∼ 14500 L m-2h−1 bar−1 at 0.5 bar, respectively. The steady performance further supports a long-lasting oil layer persists on the membrane surface and inside membrane’s pores. Next, experiments were conducted to determine the stability of the Krytox oil post accelerated cleaning tests using bleach. No structural changes to the Krytox oils were detected by thermogravimetric analysis or nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Dynamic fouling experiments using Escherichia coli K12 revealed that the liquid-infused membranes had higher flux recovery ratios (∼95 %) than the bare PVDF control membranes (∼55 %). Our results demonstrate that liquid-infused membranes exhibit chlorine stability and superior fouling resistance, presenting a promising bioinspired membrane that can be used in pressure-driven oil separation applications. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
  2. Nearly monodisperse nanoparticle (NP) spheres attached to a nonvolatile ionic liquid surface were tracked by in situ scanning electron microscopy to obtain the tracer diffusion coefficient D-tr as a function of the areal fraction phi. The in situ technique resolved both tracer (gold) and background (silica) particles for similar to 1-2 min, highlighting their mechanisms of diffusion, which were strongly dependent on phi. Structure and dynamics at low and moderate phi paralleled those reported for larger colloidal spheres, showing an increase in order and a decrease in D-tr by over 4 orders of magnitude. However, ligand interactions were more important near jamming, leading to different caging and jamming dynamics for smaller NPs. The normalized D-tr at ultrahigh phi depended on particle diameter and ligand molecular weight. Increasing the PEG molecular weight by a factor of 4 increased D-tr by 2 orders of magnitude at ultrahigh phi, indicating stronger ligand lubrication for smaller particles. 
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  6. ABSTRACT

    Crystals of poly(ethylene glycol) grown in thin films of the room temperature ionic liquid (IL) 1‐ethyl‐3‐methylimidazolium ethyl sulfate were examined by electron microscopy as a first step toward exploiting nonvolatile liquids for nanoscale imaging of solvated/dissolved polymeric materials. The crystals were generated by cooling supported (over surfaces of varied polarity) and freestanding solution films to room temperature. This “open,” that is, without liquid cell, microscopy was performed on unstained, as‐grown crystals in the presence of the IL. A variety of nearly two‐dimensional crystal morphologies were observed, including rods, fibers, spherulites, compact faceted single crystals, and interconnected networks, with characteristic sizes ranging from tens of nanometers to tens of microns. Electron diffraction patterns for the rods and fibers revealed single crystal‐like long‐range order. The nature of the IL support little affected the morphology, but film thickness and cooling rate proved important. To assess the role of solvent polarity, crystals were also grown from 1‐ethyl‐3‐methylimidazolium ethyl sulfate mixed with the second IL, the less polar ethyl‐tributyl‐phosphonium diethyl phosphate; here, although the morphologies were similar to those made with pure IL, fibrillar morphologies were more prevalent. © 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci.2020,58, 478–486

     
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