Title of article :
Effects of Pore Additives on Deep Eutectic Solvent Immobilization for CO_2/N_2 Gas Separation Using Supported Deep Eutectic Solvent Membranes
Author/Authors :
nasib, amira mohd universiti malaysia perlis - school of bioprocess engineering, kompleks pusat pengajian jejawi, Arau, Malaysia , jullok, nora universiti malaysia perlis - school of bioprocess engineering, kompleks pusat pengajian jejawi, centre of excellence biomass utilization, Arau, Malaysia , dzahir, mohd irfan hatim mohamad universiti malaysia perlis - school of bioprocess engineering, kompleks pusat pengajian jejawi, centre of excellence biomass utilization, Arau, Malaysia
Abstract :
This work analyses the effect of two different pore additives focusing on polyethylene glycol (PEG) and lithium chloride (LiCl) at different concentrations on the immobilization of a deep eutectic solvent (DES) in a polyvinylidene fluoride-co-polytetrafluoroethylene (PVDF-co- PTFE) membrane. Two compounds were chosen to synthesized the DES; choline chloride as halide salt and ethylene glycol as a hydrogen bond donor. The DES was impregnated onto the membrane pores by applying a vacuum-based technique. The membranes were prepared via phase inversion by means of immersion precipitation. For characterization purposes, scanning electron microscopy (SEM-EDX) was used to analyse the morphology of the supported- DES-membranes together with energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry. The gravimetric method was applied to calculate the porosity, while the membrane performance for carbon dioxide (CO_2) permeation and separation was assessed to determine the capability of the DES-impregnated membrane. The outcomes demonstrating that the highest loading of DES in the membrane support was obtained when 3 wt% PEG was added into the polymer solution with a porosity of 70.5%. The CO_2 permeability and the CO_2/N_2 selectivity achieved using the synthesized membrane are 2.81 x 10^6 barrer and 3.46, respectively, when working with a transmembrane pressure of 1.1 bar and a temperature of 25ᵒC at 200 cm^3 /min of gas flow rate. The results showed that additional of PEG as a pore additives able to load the highest DES in the membrane pore and resulted the best CO_2 permeability and the CO_2/N_2 selectivity.
Keywords :
Pore additives , Gas separation , Membranes , PVDF
Journal title :
Journal of Applied Membrane Science and Technology
Journal title :
Journal of Applied Membrane Science and Technology