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Water purification membranes Conferences and Events

Water purification membranes are selective barriers that remove contaminants, salts, pathogens, particles, or dissolved molecules from water while allowing clean water or target species to pass. In nanotechnology, water purification membranes can incorporate nanopores, graphene oxide, carbon nanotubes, metal-organic frameworks, ceramic nanostructures, antimicrobial nanoparticles, aquaporin-inspired channels, or surface-functionalized polymers. Their performance depends on permeability, selectivity, fouling resistance, mechanical strength, chemical stability, and manufacturability.

Water purification membranes matter because clean water is a global need across drinking-water production, desalination, wastewater treatment, industrial processing, and environmental remediation. Nanoscale design can improve flux, ion selectivity, contaminant rejection, antimicrobial activity, and resistance to biofouling or scaling. Key challenges include durability, cost, cleaning, membrane lifetime, and safe use of embedded nanomaterials. The topic connects closely to membranes, nanoporous materials, and surface functionalization.

Conferences on water purification membranes appear in nanotechnology, membrane science, environmental engineering, materials science, desalination, and water-treatment programs. Sessions often cover nanofiltration, antifouling surfaces, graphene membranes, polymer composites, ion-selective transport, and scale-up. Tracking membrane events helps researchers follow how nanoscale materials are being used to improve access to cleaner water.

Upcoming Water purification membranes events

Berlin, Germany
Abstract · 15 days
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