| Literature DB >> 30513807 |
Roman Selyanchyn1, Miho Ariyoshi2,3, Shigenori Fujikawa4,5,6,7.
Abstract
The effect of thickness in multilayer thin-film composite membranes on gas permeation has received little attention to date, and the gas permeances of the organic polymer membranes are believed to increase by membrane thinning. Moreover, the performance of defect-free layers with known gas permeability can be effectively described using the classical resistance in series models to predict both permeance and selectivity of the composite membrane. In this work, we have investigated theEntities:
Keywords: carbon dioxide capture; carbon-neutral energy; flue gas separation; gas separation; membrane; thickness influence; thin-film nanocomposite membranes
Year: 2018 PMID: 30513807 PMCID: PMC6316188 DOI: 10.3390/membranes8040121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Membranes (Basel) ISSN: 2077-0375
Figure 1Chemical structures of polymers used for double layer membrane fabrication: (a) polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and (b) general structure of Pebax® polymer family containing different amounts of polyamide 6 and polyethylene oxide blocks in the structure.
Figure 2Schematic procedure of the Pebax-1657/PDMS/porous support thin film composite (TFC) membrane fabrication.
Figure 3(a) General structure of TFC membranes investigated in this work consisting of three layers: s—selective (Pebax-1657), g—gutter (PDMS), and p—porous support layer. (b) Electrical circuit analog of the tri-layer structure.
Figure 4(a) Permeability of CO2, N2, and CO2/N2 selectivity in bulk casted PDMS membranes crosslinked in different temperature conditions. (b) Permeability of CO2, N2, and CO2/N2 selectivity in bulk Pebax-1657 films with different thicknesses fabricated via solution casting.
CO2 and N2 permeabilities and CO2/N2 selectivity of the bulk materials measured in this work compared to reported values in literature.
| Material | CO2 Permeability, Barrer | N2 Permeability, Barrer | Ideal Selectivity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDMS | 3395 ± 55 | 307 ± 3 | 11 | This work |
| 3100 a | 290 | 10.7 | [ | |
| 3632 a | 330 c | 11 | [ | |
| 3800 ± 70 b | 400 ± 10 b | 9.5 | [ | |
| Pebax-1657 | 128 ± 17 | 2.0 ± 0.4 | 64 | This work |
| 55.8 | 1.4 | 40.2 | [ | |
| 80 | 1.1 | 70 | [ | |
| 133 | 2.6 c | 52 | [ |
a Measured at 30 °C, b measured at 35 °C, c Calculated from permeability of CO2 and CO2/N2 selectivity.
Figure 5Resistance model predictions for the CO2 permeability of the composite membrane vs. CO2/N2 selectivity located in respect to the Robeson upper bound [4] and a number of the reported literature data (grey points) taken from the open database.
Figure 6Cross-section scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images (acquired on Hitachi S-5200 FESEM, with accelerating voltage 5 kV) reflecting the morphology of different fabricated TFC membranes (codes indicated in each image). All membranes containing Pebax-1657 as selective (upper) layer, PDMS as a gutter layer (middle), and porous support (bottom) as indicated for membrane M1. Insets of the cross-section show magnified views of the top Pebax-1657 layer (yellow scale bars = 1 µm). Numerical values of the thicknesses and measurement errors can be found in Table 2.
Parameters of the fabricated membranes and expected values of total CO2 permeability and CO2/N2 selectivity.
| Membrane # | Thickness of Pebax-1657 Layer, nm | Thickness of PDMS Layer, nm | Ratio of Thicknesses, | Model-Predicted CO2 Permeability, Barrer | Model-Predicted CO2 Permeance, GPU 2 | Model-Predicted Selectivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M1 | 343 ± 58 | 307 ± 70 | 0.90 | 235 | 361 ± 71 | 62.3 |
| M2 | 380 ± 29 | 428 ± 53 | 1.13 | 261 | 323 ± 33 | 61.8 |
| M3 | 279 ± 55 | 626 ± 45 | 2.24 | 383 | 432 ± 47 | 59.9 |
| M4 | 292 ± 23 | 2327 ± 164 | 7.97 | 883 | 337 ±24 | 51.8 |
| M5 | 385 ± 15 | 10,775 ± 90 | 27.99 | 1805 | 162 ± 2 | 36.8 |
| M6 | 320 ± 15 | 19,469 ± 165 | 60.84 | 2403 | 121 ± 1 | 27.1 |
1 Errors Δl and Δl represent standard deviation of the ten independent measurements of thickness using SEM image analysis. Error for total thickness was calculated by addition of Δl and Δl. 2 Errors of model predicted permeances were calculated assuming relative error of total thickness equal to relative error of calculated permeance.
Figure 7Comparison of the experimentally measured membrane performance with predictions calculated by resistance model: (a) CO2 permeance of fabricated membranes M1–M6; (b) CO2 permeance as a function of total membrane thickness; (c) CO2 permeability dependence on thickness ratio n (pink shading shows 95% confidence interval of prediction considering the error of thickness measurement); (d) CO2/N2 selectivity of fabricated membranes M1–M6.