Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10262622 | Chemical Engineering Science | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
In this study, pervaporation experiments were performed with methanol-water mixtures, ethanol-water mixtures, IPA (isopropyl alcohol)-water mixtures, and acetic acid-water mixtures, over the complete concentration range allowed by the membrane (Pervap 2201, Sulzer). The results of the three water-alcohol mixtures are compared to investigate the influence of molecular weight and polarity on the permeation behavior. The results show that ethanol and IPA have a similar permeation behavior, whereas methanol shows a different behavior. This can be explained by the relatively high polarity of methanol, which makes methanol sorption competitive with water sorption. The IPA-water mixtures are compared with the acetic acid-water mixtures. IPA and acetic acid have approximately the same molecular weight, but contain a different functional group. The acetic acid-water mixtures have a higher total flux than the IPA-water mixtures. Moreover, the partial acetic acid flux is higher than the partial IPA flux. Acetic acid contains a carbonyl group, which has a high capacity of forming hydrogen bonds with the alcohol groups of the PVA (polyvinyl alcohol) top layer. Moreover, it is a large molecule, causing high swelling resulting in a high permeation flux and a low separation factor. The behavior of the acetic acid-water mixtures shows more resemblance to the methanol-water mixtures than to the IPA-water mixtures. This suggests that the polarity and functional group of the different feed components is more important than the molecular size.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
D. Van Baelen, B. Van der Bruggen, K. Van den Dungen, J. Degreve, C. Vandecasteele,