The surface carbonization of polyimide (PI) and polysulfone (PSf) by ion beam has been performed to adapt the carbon molecular sieve properties on the skin of the polymeric membranes without the deformation of the membrane structure. In order to control the structure of membrane skin and to improve
Modification of polysulfone gas separation membranes by additives
✍ Scribed by F. A. Ruiz-Treviño; D. R. Paul
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 323 KB
- Volume
- 66
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The incorporation of additives into polymers like bisphenol A polysulfone (PSF) can provide an attractive alternative for modifying their permselective properties for gas separation, provided the additive is appropriately selected. In this work, three series of additives based on naphthalene, bisphenol A, and fluorene structures were incorporated into PSF and their effect on gas transport properties was measured. The results show that these additives increase selectivity and reduce permeability of PSF when incorporated at low concentrations. The largest increases in selectivity for the gas pairs He/CH 4 , H 2 /CH 4 , and O 2 /N 2 are caused by those additives that cause the largest reductions in the glass transition temperature and fractional free volume, and typically, they are made up of planar molecules containing polar or small asymmetric protuberances. The productivity-selectivity balance response of the modified PSF membranes reveals that the naphthalene-based additives containing asymmetric groups of atoms lead to membranes with higher selectivity and with only small losses in permeability relative to the unmodified PSF membranes. The addition of 20 wt % of the glassy additive Kenflex A into PSF causes a fourfold increase in the selectivity of PSF to He/CH 4 at the expense of a 37% reduction in the permeability of helium.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
This study investigated the effect of incorporating strong surfactants into hollow fiber membranes and solution cast films made from polysulfone (PSF). During membrane formation, various (mostly fluorinated) surfactants were added to the spinning solution, quench medium, and bore fluid. Both the gas
Membranes prepared from carboxylated polysulfone permeated benzene preferentially from benzene-cyclohexane mixtures by pervaporation. Hydrophilic polysulfones containing carboxyl groups with degrees of substitution (DS) ranging from 0.46 to 1.90 groups per repeating unit were selected for this study
Asymmetric polysulfone membranes were prepared by the phase inversion technique under different solvent evaporation conditions prior to the gelation step. The membranes were cast from the two component system of polymer and N,N-dimethylacetamide in which the polymer concentration was changed from 25