Polymeric membranes have become an emerging technology for gas separation applications. High-performance and low-cost polymeric membranes are desirable for various industrial applications. Polymer blending is a simple and versatile method to improve the separation performance of membranes. In the present work, we have significantly improved the gas separation performance of the poly(ether-block-amide) (Pebax-1657) membrane by blending it with polydimethylsiloxane-polyethylene oxide (PDMS-PEO) block copolymers. The optimal Pebax-1657/PDMS-PEO blend membrane consists of 80 wt% PDMS-PEO (Mn = 600 g/mol, ~ 60 wt% of PEO content). It can elevate the CO
2 permeability of the neat Pebax-1657 membrane by about 13 folds (1300%) from 119 to 1629 Barrer, while the CO
2/N
2 selectivity only decreases by around 25% from 42 to 32. Interestingly, the corresponding CO
2/H
2 and CO
2/CH
4 selectivities increase slightly to ~ 10. The remarkable enhancements in gas separation performance arise from the strong increases in the solubility of polar gas CO
2 and solubility selectivity of CO
2/non-polar light gas (e.g. N
2) as well as a noticeable improvement in CO
2 diffusivity as the PDMS-PEO loading increases. The impressive improvements in gas separation performance coupled with the commercially available and affordable raw materials (Pebax-1657 and PDMS-PEO) render the Pebax-1657/PDMS-PEO blend membrane promising and attractive to the industrial deployments and applications for CO
2 capture and separation.
