4.7 Article

Influences of channel morphology and Bronsted acidity on ETS-10, ZSM-5, and SSZ-13 for xenon and krypton separation

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jece.2021.106982

Keywords

Xenon; Krypton; Zeolites; Adsorption; Separation

Funding

  1. National Nat-ural Science Foundation of China [21776266, 22078037, 52071046]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Uni-versities [3132021221]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study focuses on the effects of channel morphology and Bronsted acidity on noble gas separation using three different zeolites. ZSM-5 has been found to have better selectivity for separating Xe and Kr, making it an efficient method for capturing Xe from used radioactive gas and cryogenic air.
Developing an efficient and economical technology to separate radioactive gas from used nuclear fuel is crucial for preventing nuclear pollution and the recycle of Xe and Kr. In this study, ETS-10, ZSM-5, and SSZ-13 zeolites were selected to investigate the effects of channel morphology and the Bronsted acidity for noble gas separation. The pore structures of as-synthetic zeolites were characterized by N-2 physisorption, XRD, SEM, TG, and FT-IR analyses. The Adsorption isotherms revealed that the maximum adsorption amounts of Xe and Kr (mmol g(-1)) followed the sequence of ZSM-5 (Xe: 1.69, Kr: 0.72) > ETS-10 (Xe: 1.61, Kr: 0.66) > SSZ-13 (Xe: 1.55, Kr: 0.53), reaching the advance of most reported porous materials. ZSM-5 exhibited excellent Henry's selectivity of Xe/Kr at 14.8, better than ETS-10 (12.8) and SSZ-13 (9.7), owing to its higher Qst(Xe-Kr) energy gaps resulting from its stronger coordination defects and stronger Bronsted acidity associating with the Debye force interactions. An extremely high Xe/Kr selectivity at 56 for ZSM-5 below 10 kPa through IAST calculation (Xe: Kr = 20:80) was observed, insuring efficient Xe separation from the used radioactive gas. In addition, ZSM-5 also possessed remarkable Xe/N-2, Xe/O-2, and Xe/Ar selectivities of more than 60 from Henry's selectivity, and more than 160 below 10 kPa from IAST selectivity (Xe/N-2, Xe/O-2, and Xe/Ar = 1:99), further ensuring the efficient Xe capture from cryogenic air separation. The experimental results revealed that the abundant coordination defects and the strong Bronsted acidity contributing to the Debye force interactions were essential for Xe or Kr separation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available