UR-Health

ALD Alumina Nanocoating Gives RO Membranes 5x Ozone Resistance – A Breakthrough in Desalination Durability

Atomic layer deposition of an ultrathin alumina coating boosts RO membrane ozone tolerance by 5x, enabling ozone cleaning without chemical degradation. Read the 2026 breakthrough from Environmental Science & Technology.


Biofouling is one of the biggest operational headaches in reverse osmosis (RO) desalination. It clogs membranes, raises energy demand by 20–50%, and forces frequent chemical cleanings that generate secondary pollution. Ozone disinfection – a highly effective, chlorine‑free biocide – would be an ideal solution to control biofilm growth. There is one problem: ozone is highly oxidative. Even at very low doses, ozone rapidly degrades the polyamide (PA) active layer of standard thin‑film composite RO membranes, causing irreversible loss of salt rejection.

Now, a research team from the Weizmann Institute of Science and Ben‑Gurion University has solved this “ozone‑disinfection vs. membrane‑oxidation” dilemma using atomic layer deposition (ALD). By depositing an ultrathin, just 3 nm thick alumina nanocoating on a commercial ESPA‑PA RO membrane surface, the researchers created a protective layer that provides both active and passive defense against oxidative damage.

The results, published in Environmental Science & Technology in January 2026, are striking. The alumina‑coated membrane demonstrated 5‑fold higher tolerance to ozone exposure than uncoated membranes. Under an ozone dose of 5.5 mg·h/L, the coated membrane maintained 96% salt rejection and stable water flux, while the uncoated membrane‘s rejection plummeted to just 60%. In a 48‑hour continuous ozone exposure test, the ALD‑coated membrane completely suppressed biofilm formation – the uncoated membrane lost 45% of its flux due to biofouling.

This breakthrough means that for the first time, RO plant operators can use ozone as a routine cleaning agent without sacrificing membrane life. The alumina nanocoating also prevented biofilm formation effectively and maintained stable performance after prolonged filtration-2. The technology is industrially scalable, as ALD can be performed at low temperatures (<50 °C), preserving the delicate PA structure beneath.

For the water industry, this is a game‑changer. Ozone cleaning reduces chemical consumption, eliminates chlorine‑related disinfection byproducts, and lowers overall operational costs. With ALD‑alumina RO membranes, durable, sustainable desalination is finally within reach.

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