Pentiptycene-based ladder polymers with configurational free volume for enhanced gas separation performance and physical aging resistance
Tanner Corrado, Zihan Huang, Dezhao Huang, Noah P. Wamble, Tengfei Luo, Ruilan Guo
Abstract
Significance Gas separation membranes are an emerging energy-efficient alternative toward conventional, energy-intensive separation technologies such as cryogenic distillation. Ladder polymers with intrinsic microporosity show exceptional promise toward redefining state-of-the-art gas separation membranes due to their high permeability (throughput) and selectivity (separation efficiency). However, they are typically inhibited by major reductions in permeability over time due to collapsing membrane free volume (open space between polymer chains), forfeiting their greatest asset. This work explores a route toward enhanced aging resistance and overall separation performance by incorporating pentiptycene (an H-shaped scaffold containing five fused arene rings) into ladder-like polymers to incorporate natural, more permanent “micropores” that aren’t susceptible to densification of polymer chains that occurs over time in traditional microporous polymers.