Science Inventory

HYDROPHOBIC ZEOLITE-SILICONE RUBBER MIXED MATRIX MEMBRANES FOR ETHANOL-WATER SEPARATION: EFFECT OF ZEOLITE AND SILICONE COMPONENT SELECTION ON PERVAPORATION PERFORMANCE

Citation:

VANE, L. M., VASU V. NAMBOODIRI, AND T. BOWEN. HYDROPHOBIC ZEOLITE-SILICONE RUBBER MIXED MATRIX MEMBRANES FOR ETHANOL-WATER SEPARATION: EFFECT OF ZEOLITE AND SILICONE COMPONENT SELECTION ON PERVAPORATION PERFORMANCE. W.J. Koros (ed.), JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, 308(1-2):230-241, (2008).

Impact/Purpose:

to publish information

Description:

High-silica ZSM 5 zeolites were incorporated into poly(dimethyl siloxane) (PDMS) polymers to form mixed matrix membranes for ethanol removal from water via pervaporation. Membrane formulation and preparation parameters were varied to determine the effect on pervaporation performance including siloxane chain length, crosslinking agent concentration and density of reactive groups, catalyst level, solvent type, zeolite type and loading, mixing method, and presence of a porous support membrane. Uniform dispersion of zeolite was critical to the achievement of reproducible results and ultrasonication with a probe-type device was found to be effective at particle dispersal. Properties of the polymer system, the vinyl-terminated PDMS and methyl-hydride crosslinking agents, had limited effect on performance. The presence of an ultrafiltration membrane support on the permeate side of the mixed matrix selective layer caused measurable decreases in selectivity and flux, even though the selective layer was on the order of 100 µm thick. Ethanol permeance and ethanol-water selectivities increased monotonically with zeolite loading. The highest observed selectivity of 3.0 was observed with 65 wt% zeolite loading, the highest practicable loading for the polymer system studied. The current results are placed in the context of ZSM-5/PDMS mixed matrix membranes reported in the literature for ethanol-water separation.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:02/01/2008
Record Last Revised:04/16/2008
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 169063