Title of article :
Effects of surface treatments and annealing on carbon-based
molecular sieve membranes for gas separation
Author/Authors :
Liang-Jun Wang، نويسنده , , Franklin Chau-Nan Hong، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
A new method in preparing carbon-based molecular sieve (CMS) membranes for gas separation has been proposed. Carbonbased
films are deposited on porous Al2O3 disks using hexamethyldisiloxane (HMDSO) by remote inductively coupled plasma
(ICP) chemical vapor deposition (CVD). After treating the film with ion bombardment and subsequent pyrolysis at a high
temperature, carbon-based molecule sieve membranes can be obtained, exhibiting a very high H2/N2 selectivity around 100 and
an extremely high permeance of H2 around 1.5 10 6 mol m 2 s 1 Pa 1 at 298 K. The O2/N2 selectivity could reach 5.4 with
the O2 permeance of 2 10 7 mol m 2 s 1 Pa 1 at 423 K.
During surface treatments, HMDSO ions were found to be more effective than CH4, Ar, O2 and N2 ions to improve the
selectivity and permeance. Short and optimized surface treatment periods were required for high efficiency. Without pyrolysis,
surface treatments alone greatly reduced the H2 and N2 permeances and had no effect on the selectivity. Besides, without any
surface treatment, pyrolysis alone greatly increased the H2 and N2 permeances, but had no improvement on the selectivity, owing
to the creation of large pores by desorption of carbon. A combination of surface treatment and pyrolysis is necessary for
simultaneously enhancing the permeance and the selectivity of CMS membranes, very different from the conventional poreplugging
mechanism in typical CVD.
Keywords :
Gas separation , Plasma chemical vapor deposition , Carbon molecular sieve membranes , Ionbombardment , Inductively coupled plasma
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science