Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5209871 | Reactive and Functional Polymers | 2015 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
Gas separation membranes have been studied for several decades and are starting to find commercial acceptance. This review will focus on polymer functionalization to improve gas separation performance, namely, permeability, permselectivity, or both. The review will cover both “diffusivity controlled” and “solubility controlled” functionalization strategies; each strategy refers to the different mode of gas transport through the membrane. Diffusivity controlled functionalization strategies mainly involve control over free volume elements in amorphous polymers via promotion or inhibition of chain packing through functional groups. As such, the effects of this functionalization are typically confined to the well-known selectivity/permeability tradeoff. Solubility controlled modification strategies utilize functional groups that have strong chemical interactions with some of the penetrant molecules and offers an enhanced solution-diffusion or a non-solution-diffusion permeation pathway. This functionalization can potentially exceed the Robeson upper bound, but is often challenged by impurities and deactivation of the chemical functionality.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
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Authors
Melinda L. Jue, Ryan P. Lively,