Conventional oily wastewater treatment can remove slick oil and dispersed oil well, but it is difficult for it to remove emulsified oil. Nonetheless, the development of super wetting materials provides a key role in treating the emulsified oil, but there are some problems, such as expensive raw materials, complicated processes, as well as secondary pollution. In order to treat these problems, a brand-new oil/water separation membrane (TEA/PVDF membrane) was developed by combining the viscosity of sodium alginate (SA) and the filter tea powder (TEA) onto the surface of the polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) membrane by a vacuum pump. Furthermore, the underwater oleophobic angle reached 135o. Moreover, the oil-water separation experiments of oil-in-water emulsion utilizing TEA/PVDF membrane demonstrated excellent separation efficiency (99.6%) and good flux (254 L m-2 h-1 bar-1). Notably, upon ten cycles, the oil removal rate was still as high as 99.2%. Moreover, the TEA/PVDF membrane was able to separate oil-in-water emulsions in environments with strong acids, strong bases, and high salt concentrations, with a separation efficiency of over 95.9%. Such a novel oil/water separation membrane is economic, environmentally protective, and simple production process, which exhibits overwhelming potential in practical life for treating oily wastewater.