TITEL
Tailoring of MFI membranes for enhanced selectivity
FöRFATTARE
Lindmark, Jonas
INSTITUTION
Tillämpad kemi och geovetenskap / Kemisk teknologi
SAMMANFATTNING
Zeolite membranes can potentially be used for the separation of
many types of mixtures. The membranes can be tailored by a number
of methods to suit a specific separation application. In this work
both traditional and new innovative methods were used to tailor
the properties of membranes in order to enhance the selectivity
for a given separation. Traditional methods to tailor zeolite
membranes include; choice of zeolite framework, adjustment of
Si/Al ratio and choice of counterion. In zeolite catalysts the
properties are often also tailored by incorporating metal or metal
oxide clusters in the zeolite pores by impregnation.
In this work the traditional methods for membrane
tailoring by adjusting the Si/Al-ratio and exchanging the
counterions have been used. In addition, a new method where the
impregnation concept often used in catalyst preparation is adapted
to tailor the properties of zeolite membranes, was used.
The polarity of a zeolite can be tailored by changing
the Si/Al ratio, and to facilitate the separation of polar and non
polar molecure e.g. H2O and H2, the Si/Al ratio should be
relatively low. In the present work, separation of mixtures of
H2O, H2 and n-hexane was investigated for membranes with two
different Si/Al ratios (silicalite-1 and ZSM-5), in the
temperature range 25 to 350 C. The highest separation
factors H2O/H2 were observed at 25 C and
were 14.3 and 19.7 for silicalite-1 and ZSM-5, respectively. The
membranes were selective also at 100 C and the separation
factors were about 3.2 and 6 for silicalite-1 and ZSM-5,
respectively. These results confirm that the selectivity for this
separation can be controlled by changing the polarity the
zeolite.
The aim of the new and innovative modification procedure
was to prepare CO2 selective membranes with high flux. The
pores of a silicalite-1 membrane were impregnated with calcium
compounds to aid the chemisorption of CO2, which is essential
to achieve a membrane which is CO2 selective even at high
temperatures. The result of the impregnation was evaluated by
separation of CO2 and H2. Calcined membranes were
impregnated with a solution of Ca(NO3)2 in methanol and
heated to 600 to thermally decompose the Ca(NO3)2
Calcium compounds were evenly distributed in the pores of the
silicalite-1 film and there were also some relatively large
CaCO3 crystals on the surface. The separation experiments
with of mixtures of CO2 and H2 showed that the separation
factor CO2/H2 at 25C was drastically changed
from 0.7 (H2 selective) to 3.7 (CO2 selective) by this
modification. These results show that the properties of
the H2 selective silicalite-1 membrane could be tailored by
impregnation to prepare a CO2 selective membrane.
ISSN 1402-1757 / ISRN LTU-LIC--06/56--SE / NR 2006:56
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