2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(241c) Permeability Enhancement in Nanoparticle Filled Polymeric Membranes
Authors
Recently, a new nanocomposite family has been discovered utilizing rubbery polymers as the matrix. Like the stiff chain polymers, light gas (i.e., carbon dioxide, hydrogen, nitrogen, and methane) permeability and diffusivity increase with increasing particle loading, (e.g., carbon dioxide permeability in 1,2-polybutadiene filled with 34 volume percent MgO is 2600 % higher than the unfilled polymer). The change in permeability and diffusivity depend on particle dispersion, which is closely related to particle-polymer interactions. However, depending on particle surface chemistry and penetrant-particle interactions, penetrant solubility may also be enhanced. These studies have focused on both polar (i.e., crosslinked poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate) and non-polar (i.e., 1,2-polubutadiene) polymers, as well as a series of particles (i.e., MgO, TiO2, SiO2). These materials have been characterized using light gas sorption and permeation to monitor gas transport properties as well as AFM and X-ray microtomography to characterize particle distribution within the polymer matrix.
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