4.7 Article

Antiplasticization and plasticization of Matrimid® asymmetric hollow fiber membranes-Part A. Experimental

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE
Volume 350, Issue 1-2, Pages 232-241

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.memsci.2009.12.033

Keywords

n-Heptane; Toluene; Matrimid (R) asymmetric fibers

Funding

  1. Coca Cola Company
  2. Air Liqude
  3. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) [KUS-I1-011-21]

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The complex effects of highly sorbing feed gas contaminants such as toluene and n-heptane on performance of both annealed and non-annealed Matrimid (R) asymmetric fibers relevant to CO2/CH4 separation are reported. Membrane performance was quantified both during contaminant exposure and after removal of the contaminant from the feed stream. Exposure to either toluene or n-heptane during permeation reduces carbon dioxide permeance and the carbon dioxide/methane selectivity in non-annealed fibers. After exchange with a contaminant-free feed containing only CO2 and CH4 mixed gas, the carbon dioxide permeance and carbon dioxide/methane selectivity were affected, indicating a glassy state conditioning effect due to the prior contaminant exposure. Interestingly, the conditioning effect after simultaneous exposure to toluene and n-heptane (284 ppm toluene and 504 ppm n-heptane) was less than the conditioning observed for either toluene (293 ppm) or n-heptane (505 ppm) individually. Sub-T-g annealing reduced carbon dioxide permeance during actual contaminant exposure more severely than in non-annealed fibers. On the other hand, except for exposure to the highest n-heptane contaminant feed (2003 ppm), annealing significantly reduced the post-exposure conditioning observed in carbon dioxide permeance and carbon dioxide/methane selectivity. It appears that annealing allows the consolidation of segmental packing which stabilized the glassy matrix against swelling. At sufficiently high activities of even a relatively non-interacting penetrant like n-heptane, the annealing-induced stabilization can be reversed. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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