4.5 Article

A Strategical Improvement in the Performance of CO2/N2 Gas Permeation via Conjugation of L-Tyrosine onto Chitosan Membrane

Journal

MEMBRANES
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/membranes13050487

Keywords

CO2/N-2 separation; chitosan; L-tyrosine; grafting; biopolymer; amino acid

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Rubbery polymeric membranes with covalently conjugated L-tyrosine onto high molecular weight chitosan demonstrate good thermal stability, defect-free dense structure, and high CO2 permeance and selectivity, making them potential materials for CO2 capture.
Rubbery polymeric membranes, containing amine carriers, have received much attention in CO2 separation because of their easy fabrication, low cost, and excellent separation performance. The present study focuses on the versatile aspects of covalent conjugation of L-tyrosine (Tyr) onto the high molecular weight chitosan (CS) accomplished by using carbodiimide as a coupling agent for CO2/N-2 separation. The fabricated membrane was subjected to FTIR, XRD, TGA, AFM, FESEM, and moisture retention tests to examine the thermal and physicochemical properties. The defect-free dense layer of tyrosine-conjugated-chitosan, with active layer thickness within the range of similar to 600 nm, was cast and employed for mixed gas (CO2/N-2) separation study in the temperature range of 25-115 degrees C in both dry and swollen conditions and compared to that of a neat CS membrane. An enhancement in the thermal stability and amorphousness was displayed by TGA and XRD spectra, respectively, for the prepared membranes. The fabricated membrane showed reasonably good CO2 permeance of around 103 GPU and CO2/N-2 selectivity of 32 by maintaining a sweep/feed moisture flow rate of 0.05/0.03 mL/min, respectively, an operating temperature of 85 degrees C, and a feed pressure of 32 psi. The composite membrane demonstrated high permeance because of the chemical grafting compared to the bare chitosan. Additionally, the excellent moisture retention capacity of the fabricated membrane accelerates high CO2 uptake by amine carriers, owing to the reversible zwitterion reaction. All the features make this membrane a potential membrane material for CO2 capture.

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