Molecular sieve silica membranes for H2/CO separation
Contribuinte(s) |
D. G. Wood |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2001
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Resumo |
Efficient separation of fuel gas (H2) from other gases in reformed gas mixtures is becoming increasingly important in the development of alternative energy systems. A highly efficient and new technology available for these separations is molecular sieve silica (MSS) membranes derived from tetraethyl-orthosilicate (TEOS). A permeation model is developed from an analogous electronic system and compared to transport theory to determine permeation, selectivity and apparent activation of energy based on experimental values. Experimental results for high quality membranes show single gas permselectivity peaking at 57 for H2/CO at 150°C with a H2 permeation of 5.14 x 10^-8 mol.m^-2.s^-1.Pa^-1. Higher permeance was also achieved, but at the expense of selectivity. This is the case for low quality membranes with peak H2 permeation at 1.78 x 10-7 mol.m-2.s-1.Pa-1 at 22°C and H2/CO permselectivity of 4.5. High quality membranes are characterised with positive apparent activation energy while the low quality membranes have negative values. The model had a good fit of r-squared of 0.99-1.00 using the experimental data. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
I. E. Aust |
Palavras-Chave | #290603 Membrane and Separation Technologies #1007 Nanotechnology #0302 Inorganic Chemistry #670707 Inorganic industrial chemicals #EX |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |