▎ 摘 要
Graphene oxide nanofiltration membranes with tunable interlayer spacing tend to be either unstable in water or have low water permeation rates. Here the authors report a general synthetic method to achieve ultrafine metal oxide - reduced graphene oxide nanocomposites for dye filtration, achieving high water permeability and selectivity. Graphene-based membranes have great potential to revolutionize nanofiltration technology, but achieving high solute rejections at high water flux remains extremely challenging. Herein, a family of ultrafine metal oxide/reduced graphene oxide (rGO) nanocomposites are synthesized through a heterogenous nucleation and diffusion-controlled growth process for dye nanofiltration. The synthesis is based on the utilization of oxygen functional groups on GO surface as preferential active sites for heterogeneous nucleation, leading to the formation of sub-3 nm size, monodispersing as well as high-density loading of metal oxide nanoparticles. The anchored ultrafine nanoparticles could inhibit the wrinkling of the rGO nanosheet, forming highly stable colloidal solutions for the solution processing fabrication of nanofiltration membranes. By functioning as pillars, the nanoparticles remarkably increase both vertical interlayer spacing and lateral tortuous paths of the rGO membranes, offering a water permeability of 225 L m(-2) h(-1) bar(-1) and selectivity up to 98% in the size-exclusion separation of methyl blue.