Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
636442 Journal of Membrane Science 2010 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Strong inhibitive effects of CO on hydrogen permeation through thin, Pd-based membranes have been found to exist. In this work, it is shown experimentally that the inhibition by CO was significantly reduced after heat treatment in air. A ∼3 μm thick Pd–Ag (23 wt.%) membrane was mounted in a microchannel configuration that allowed sweep gas and other transport effects to be eliminated. The CO inhibition was investigated at 300 and 350 °C before and after exposure to air at 300 °C for nearly five days, by determining the change in flux upon increasing CO concentration under constant hydrogen partial pressure. While the flux was decreased by ∼60% by going from 0 to 1 mol% CO at 350 °C before heat treatment in air, the reduction was only ∼15% after the treatment. This relative improvement under CO comes in addition to the intrinsic improvement in hydrogen permeance upon heat treatment in air. An approach combining a Sieverts–Langmuir model equation and microkinetic modelling (through transition state and unity bond index-quadratic exponential potential theories), indicates that the effect can be explained by changes in CO and H2 heats of adsorption upon the treatment.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Filtration and Separation
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