Back Cover: In article number 2100585 by Karim Aissou and co‐workers, a nanoporous layer of perforated lamellae (PL) is produced on top surface of asymmetric triblock terpolymer membranes generated by non‐solvent induced phase separation. The thickness of the PL phase is adjusted by varying the duration of the solvent vapor annealing (SVA) treatment.
Asymmetric and nanostructured polystyrene-block-poly(2-vinyl pyridine)-block-poly(ethylene oxide) (PS-b-P2VP-b-PEO or SVEO, S:V:EO ≈ 56:34:10, 79.5 kg mol -1 ) thick films blended with 20 wt% of a short PS homopolymer (hPS, 10.5 kg mol -1 ) are achieved by combining the non-solvent induced phase separation (NIPS) process with a solvent vapor annealing (SVA) treatment. Here, the NIPS step allows for the formation of a highly-permeable sponge-like substructure topped by a dense thin layer exhibiting poorly-ordered nanopores while the subsequent SVA treatment enables to reconstruct the material top surface into a porous monolayer of well-ordered hexagonal perforated lamellae (HPL). This optimized film architecture generated by NIPS-SVA shows a water permeability of 860 L h -1 m -2 bar -1 , which is roughly two times higher than the flux measured through NIPS made PS-b-P2VP-b-PEO/hPS materials having poorly-ordered nanopores. The post-SVA treatment is also revealed as a powerful tool to tailor the thickness of the nanostructure formed within the blended material because monoliths entirely composed of a HPL phase are produced by increasing the time of exposure to a chloroform stream. The water flux of such PS-b-P2VP-b-PEO/hPS monoliths is found to be an order of magnitude lower than that of their asymmetric film homologues.
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