4.8 Review

Review on the preparation of carbon membranes derived from phenolic resins for gas separation: From petrochemical precursors to bioresources

Journal

CARBON
Volume 183, Issue -, Pages 12-33

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2021.06.087

Keywords

Carbon membranes; Carbon molecular sieves; Phenolic resin-based carbon membranes; Bio-based phenolic resins; Gas separation processes

Funding

  1. Institute of Sciences and Systems Engineering (INSIS) of the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)
  2. TALiSMAN project - European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) [2019-000214]

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Membrane processes are competitive in gas separation, while resin-derived carbon membranes have improved performance and are applied in processes such as hydrogen purification, air separation, natural gas/biogas sweetening, or carbon dioxide capture.
Membrane processes, whose low energy and operating costs make them competitive for gas separation compared to other conventional methods such as pressure swing adsorption, cryogenic distillation or amine absorption, allows high-purity gas to be obtained in a sustainable and continuous manner. Similarly, resin-derived carbon membranes with molecular sieving properties have improved the selectivity and permeability of conventional dense membranes, as well as having high chemical and thermal resistance. In this review, an overview of the preparation of phenolic resin-based carbon membranes and their performance in gas separation is presented, particularly in processes involving permanent gases such as hydrogen purification, air separation, natural gas/biogas sweetening or carbon dioxide capture. Moreover, bioresources already proven for the synthesis of greener phenolic resins and the separation performance of some carbon membranes based on bioresource-derived phenolic resins are also reported and discussed in this work. This review will summarise the development and gas separation performance of phenolic resin-based carbon membranes and will provide a clear future direction in green carbon membranes research. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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