Abstract
Liquid CO2 and organic solvent permeation was examined through a series of mesoporous ceramic membranes with different selective layers. In its liquid state, CO2 acts as a non-polar organic solvent with comparable density and moderately lower viscosity, but with much lower surface tension. A custom high-pressure, cross-flow filtration system was used to investigate liquid CO2 permeation in tubular membranes (Membralox™), while organic solvent permeation was examined using disk membranes (Sterlitech). Irreversible CO2 adsorption, via reaction with surface OH to yield carbonate-like species, might have reduced the effective pore size. When water was present, a significant reduction in CO2 flux and non-linear permeation behavior was observed. For the organic solvents, ethanol, butanol, and acetone exhibited transient permeation profiles, also consistent with a reduction in the effective pore size via adsorption. Adsorption was reversed with drying. Solvent-membrane interactions and their effect on non-aqueous solvent permeation (including hexane and toluene) were discussed. This is an abstract of a paper presented at the AIChE Annual Meeting and Fall Showcase (Cincinnati, OH 10/30/2005-11/4/2005).
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | AIChE Annual Meeting, Conference Proceedings |
| Volume | 2005 |
| State | Published - Jan 1 2005 |
| Event | 05AIChE: 2005 AIChE Annual Meeting and Fall Showcase - , United States Duration: Oct 30 2005 → Nov 4 2005 |
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