Thermal Cycling Stability of Silica Membranes for Gas Separation


Autoria(s): Duke, M. C.; Tam, E.; Gray, P. H.; Diniz da Costa, J. C.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Hydrogen is being seen as an alternative energy carrier to conventional hydrocarbons to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. High efficiency separation technologies to remove hydrogen from the greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, are therefore in growing demand. Traditional thermodynamic separation systems utilise distillation, absorption and adsorption, but are limited in efficiency at compact scales. Molecular sieve silica (MSS) membranes can perform this separation as they have high permselectivity of hydrogen to carbon dioxide, but their stability under thermal cycling is not well reported. In this work we exposed a standard MSS membrane and a carbonised template MSS (CTMSS) membrane to thermal cycling from 100 to 450°C. The standard MSS and carbonised template CTMSS membranes both showed permselectivity of helium to nitrogen dropping from around 10 to 6 in the first set of cycles, remaining stable until the last test. The permselectivity drop was due to small micropore collapse, which occurred via structure movement during cycling. Simulating single stage membrane separation with a 50:50 molar feed of H2:CO2, H2 exiting the permeate stream would start at 79% and stabilise at 67%. Higher selectivity membranes showed less of a purity drop, indicating the margin at which to design a stable membrane separation unit for CO2 capture.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:12192/mcd_05.pdf

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:12192

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Massey University

Palavras-Chave #290603 Membrane and Separation Technologies #E1 #291899 Interdisciplinary Engineering not elsewhere classified #620107 Cotton
Tipo

Conference Paper