4.5 Article

Effect of membrane performance variability with temperature and feed composition on pervaporation and vapor permeation system design for solvent drying

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 10, Pages 2706-2719

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jctb.7161

Keywords

solvent reclamation; membrane permeability; membrane processes; dehydration; pervaporation; vapor permeation; membrane-based separation

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This study investigates the impact of variable membrane permeabilities on predictions of PV/VP system performance. The results show that the variable permeabilities of the membranes significantly alter the required membrane area for water removal from ethanol by PV and the transfer of ethanol to the permeate stream.
BACKGROUND The presence of water in organic solvents and biofuels can complicate their production and reuse because many hydrophilic solvents form difficult-to-separate mixtures with water (e.g., azeotropes). Pervaporation (PV) and vapor permeation (VP) remove water from such mixtures via selective solution-diffusion transport through a membrane material. A recent article reviewed design factors that impact the effectiveness of PV/VP solvent dehydration processes (J. Chem. Technol. Biotechnol 95: 495-512 (2020)). For the sake of simplicity, the earlier work assumed constant membrane permeabilities. The objective here is to explore the impact of variable permeabilities on predictions of PV/VP system performance. RESULTS A multiparameter expression relating permeability to process conditions was incorporated into the spreadsheet calculators from the previous work. Use of the expression was demonstrated with literature ethanol/water PV data for a NaA zeolite material and two poly (vinyl alcohol) (PVA) membranes. The variable permeabilities of the membranes yielded membrane area requirements that were 20-30% different from those calculated using permeances fixed at either end of the target water range. The impact of composition-dependent permeabilities was most pronounced on the fraction of ethanol transferred to the permeate for the NaA membrane. CONCLUSION The inclusion of membrane permeabilities that vary with fluid composition and temperature noticeably altered predictions of the membrane area required to carry out water removal from ethanol by PV and of the transfer of ethanol to the permeate stream. Unless a PV/VP process is expected to operate at a constant temperature and in a narrow concentration range, process performance estimates would be improved by inclusion of concentration- and temperature-dependent permeabilities or permeances. Published 2022. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

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