Fabrication of High-Flux Defect-Free Hollow Fiber Membranes Derived from a Phenolphthalein-Based Copolyimide for Gas Separation

39 Pages Posted: 20 Oct 2023

See all articles by Bo Chen

Bo Chen

Beijing University of Chemical Technology

Guoke Zhao

Tsinghua University

Cher Hon Lau

University of Edinburgh

Fuwei Wang

Beijing University of Chemical Technology

Shuxin Fan

Beijing University of Chemical Technology

Chuang Niu

Beijing University of Chemical Technology

Zhongzheng Ren

Beijing University of Chemical Technology

Gongqing Tang

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Yiqun Liu

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Peiyong Qin

Beijing University of Chemical Technology - National Energy R&D Center for Biorefinery

Pei Li

Beijing University of Chemical Technology

Abstract

In the realm of gas purifications, hollow fiber membranes have gained significant prominence due to their unique advantages. However, achieving defect-free membranes poses a considerable challenge. In this study, we addressed this challenge with a novel copolymer, 6FDA-DAM:DAP(2:1), comprising 4,4’-(hexafluoroisopropylidene) diphthalic anhydride (6FDA), 2,4.6-Trimethy-m-phenylenediamine (DAM), and a phenolphthalein-derived diamine of 3,3’-diaminophenolphthalein (DAP). We found that defect-free hollow fiber membranes could be prepared when 20 wt.% or more ethanol was added in the polymer dope solution, but this led to the formation of oval hollow fibers that would be flattened under high pressure. We solved this limitation by lowering ethanol content to 15 wt. %, adding 2 wt. % LiNO3, and increasing the air-gap distance. These measures reduced the difference in phase inversion rates between the surface region and the bulk phase of the nascent hollow fiber. The CO2 permeance of this defect-free hollow fiber membrane reached 282 GPU with a CO2/CH4 selectivity of 50.2. Highly permeable defective hollow fiber membranes were also developed using a polymer dope without LiNO3 and a low THF content of 5 wt.%. After coated by silicone rubber, the CO2 permeance of the membrane reached 554 GPU with a CO2/CH4 selectivity of 45.0. In mixed gas tests, the two membranes exhibited O2 permeances of approximately 43.3 and 75.3 GPU, with O2/N2 selectivities of 5.5 and 5.4, respectively. Their CO2 permeances were 281 and 465 GPU, with CO2/CH4 selectivities of 45 and 41, CO2/N2 selectivities of 35.7 and 33.3, respectively. These separation performances out-performed state-of-art polymeric hollow fiber membranes and demonstrated great potential for gas separation applications such as natural gas sweetening, flue gas treatment, and air separation.

Keywords: Hollow fiber, Defect-free, 6FDA-DAM:DAP copolyimide, Gas Separation

Suggested Citation

Chen, Bo and Zhao, Guoke and Lau, Cher Hon and Wang, Fuwei and Fan, Shuxin and Niu, Chuang and Ren, Zhongzheng and Tang, Gongqing and Liu, Yiqun and Qin, Peiyong and Li, Pei, Fabrication of High-Flux Defect-Free Hollow Fiber Membranes Derived from a Phenolphthalein-Based Copolyimide for Gas Separation. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4607827 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4607827

Bo Chen

Beijing University of Chemical Technology ( email )

15 N. 3rd Ring Rd E
Chaoyang, Beijing, 201204
China

Guoke Zhao

Tsinghua University ( email )

Beijing, 100084
China

Cher Hon Lau

University of Edinburgh ( email )

Fuwei Wang

Beijing University of Chemical Technology ( email )

15 N. 3rd Ring Rd E
Chaoyang, Beijing, 201204
China

Shuxin Fan

Beijing University of Chemical Technology ( email )

15 N. 3rd Ring Rd E
Chaoyang, Beijing, 201204
China

Chuang Niu

Beijing University of Chemical Technology ( email )

15 N. 3rd Ring Rd E
Chaoyang, Beijing, 201204
China

Zhongzheng Ren

Beijing University of Chemical Technology ( email )

15 N. 3rd Ring Rd E
Chaoyang, Beijing, 201204
China

Gongqing Tang

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

No Address Available

Yiqun Liu

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

No Address Available

Peiyong Qin

Beijing University of Chemical Technology - National Energy R&D Center for Biorefinery ( email )

Beijing
China

Pei Li (Contact Author)

Beijing University of Chemical Technology ( email )

15 N. 3rd Ring Rd E
Chaoyang, Beijing, 201204
China

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