4.8 Article

Pentiptycene-based ladder polymers with configurational free volume for enhanced gas separation performance and physical aging resistance

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2022204118

Keywords

ladder polymers; iptycenes configurational free volume; physical aging; gas separation membranes

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET-1603414]
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program [DGE-1841556]
  3. Division of Chemical Sciences, Biosciences, and Geosciences, Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the US Department of Energy [DE-SC0019024]
  4. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0019024] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

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By incorporating pentiptycene-based PIMs into copolymers with PIM-1, this study achieved initial performance enhancements and aging-enhanced gas permeabilities in gas separation membranes.
Polymers of intrinsic microporosity (PIMs) have shown promise in pushing the limits of gas separation membranes, recently redefining upper bounds for a variety of gas pair separations. However, many of these membranes still suffer from reductions in permeability over time, removing the primary advantage of this class of polymer. In this work, a series of pentiptycene-based PIMs incorporated into copolymers with PIM-1 are examined to identify fundamental structure-property relationships between the configuration of the pentiptycene backbone and its accompanying linear or branched substituent group. The incorporation of pentiptycene provides a route to instill a more permanent, configuration-based free volume, resistant to physical aging via traditional collapse of conformation-based free volume. PPIM-ip-C and PPIM-np-S, copolymers with C-and S-shape backbones and branched isopropoxy and linear n-propoxy substituent groups, respectively, each exhibited initial separation performance enhancements relative to PIM-1. Additionally, aging-enhanced gas permeabilities were observed, a stark departure from the typical permeability losses pure PIM-1 experiences with aging. Mixed-gas separation data showed enhanced CO2/CH4 selectivity relative to the pure-gas permeation results, with only-20% decreases in selectivity when moving from a CO2 partial pressure of-similar to 2.4 to similar to 7.1 atm (atmospheric pressure) when utilizing a mixed-gas CO2/CH4 feed stream. These results highlight the potential of pentiptycene's intrinsic, configurational free volume for simultaneously delivering size-sieving above the 2008 upper bound, along with exceptional resistance to physical aging that often plagues high free volume PIMs.

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