Synthesis and characterization of sodalite–polyimide nanocomposite membranes


Autoria(s): Li, Dan; Zhu, Huai Yong; Ratinac, Kyle R.; Ringer, Simon P.; Wang, Huanting
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

Nanocomposite membranes are fabricated from sodalite nanocrystals (Sod-N) dispersed in BTDA-MDA polyimide matrices and then characterized structurally and for gas separation. No voids are found upon investigation of the interfacial contact between the inorganic and organic phases, even at a Sod-N loading of up to 35 wt.%. This is due to the functionalization of the zeolite nanocrystals with amino groups (==Si_(CH3)(CH2)3NH2), which covalently link the particles to the polyimide chains in the matrices. The addition of Sod-N increases the hydrogen-gas permeability of the membranes, while nitrogen permeability decreases. Overall, these nanocomposite membranes display substantial selectivity improvements. The sodalite–polyimide membrane containing 35 wt.% Sod-N has a hydrogen permeability of 8.0 Barrers and a H2/N2 ideal selectivity of 281 at 25 C whereas the plain polyimide membrane exhibits a hydrogen permeability of 7.0 Barrers and a H2/N2 ideal selectivity of 198 at the same testing temperature.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/29641/

Publicador

Elsevier

Relação

DOI:10.1016/j.micromeso.2009.05.014

Li, Dan, Zhu, Huai Yong, Ratinac, Kyle R., Ringer, Simon P., & Wang, Huanting (2009) Synthesis and characterization of sodalite–polyimide nanocomposite membranes. Microporous and Mesoporous Materials, 126(1-2), pp. 14-19.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #Sodalite #Polyimide #Nanocomposite membrane #Hydrogen separation
Tipo

Journal Article