4.6 Article

Materials selection guidelines for membranes that remove CO2 from gas mixtures

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR STRUCTURE
Volume 739, Issue 1-3, Pages 57-74

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.molstruc.2004.07.045

Keywords

membranes; separation; solubility selectivity; carbon dioxide; poly(ethylene oxide)

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Membrane technology has been investigated for removing CO2 from mixtures with light gases such as CH4, N-2 and H-2, and optimal membranes with high CO2 permeability and high CO2/light gas selectivity are of great interest. This overview describes the material science approaches to achieve high CO2 solubility and CO2/light gas solubility selectivity by introducing polar groups in polymers. CO2 solubility and CO2/N-2 solubility selectivity in both liquid solvents and solid polymers containing a variety of polar groups are discussed. Optimum materials appear to have a solubility parameter of about 21.8 MPa0.5 to achieve both high solubility and high solubility selectivity. However, the introduction of polar groups can decrease CO2 diffusion coefficients and can make a material more size-selective, which is detrimental to, for example, CO2/H-2 separation properties. So far, ether oxygens in ethylene oxide (EO) units appear to provide a good balance Of CO2 separation and permeation properties. One drawback of using pure poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) is its strong tendency to crystallize. This report reviews strategies for incorporating high concentrations of EO units into polymers while suppressing crystallization. A simple model, based on free volume theory, is used to correlate a wide range Of CO2 permeability coefficients in PEO containing materials, and the results are satisfactory, particularly given the simplicity of the model. Crosslinked poly(ethylene glycol) acrylate (XLPEO) containing branches with methoxy end groups exhibit the highest CO2 permeability (i.e. 570 Barters) and highest CO2/H-2 selectivity (i.e. 12) at 35 degrees C and infinite dilution among all PEO containing materials reported to date. Because such materials do not crystallize at typically accessible temperatures, CO2/H-2 selectivity can be further improved by decreasing temperature. For example, at an upstream pressure of 4.4 atm, CO2/H-2 pure gas selectivity reaches a value of 40 at -20 degrees C while maintaining a CO2 permeability of 52 Barters. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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