Litcius/Paper detail

Polymer Materials for Membrane Separation of Gas Mixtures Containing CO2

A. Yu. Alentiev, В. Е. Рыжих, Н. Н. Белов

2021Polymer Science Series C21 citationsDOI

Abstract

In recent decades, the need to capture carbon dioxide from industrial gas streams, its storage, and utilization has been justified as a rule by environmental problems. However, the capture of CO2 from industrial gas mixtures is an independent important issue of chemical technology. The review addresses consideration and analysis of polymer materials for the membrane separation of CO2-containing mixtures which are of interest for purification of natural gas, biogas, and flue gases and separation of hydrogen from methane and water gas conversion products. Therefore, gas pairs CO2/CH4, CO2/N2, and CO2/H2 are relevant for membrane separation. Promising polymer materials should possess the beneficial combination of CO2 permeability and selectivity for the gas pair of interest, that is, should be located near the upper bound of the Robeson diagram or be above it. For separation of the first two gas pairs good gas-separation parameters are exhibited by rigid-chain highly permeable glassy polymers of various classes (polymers of intrinsic microporosity, polyimides, polynorbornenes, polybenzoxazoles). For separation of the gas pair CO2/N2 the most advantageous properties are shown by polymers bearing functional groups capable of specific interactions with carbon dioxide (aliphatic polyethers and polyimides with their oligomer moieties, polynorbornenes carrying Si‒O–C and Si–O–Si groups, polymers with ionogenic groups). Thermally stable barrier polymers based on polybenzoxazoles show promise for purification of hydrogen from carbon dioxide at high temperatures.

Topics & Concepts

Gas separationPolymerMembraneFlue gasOligomerMethaneChemical engineeringBiogasCarbon dioxideChemistryHydrogenMaterials scienceOrganic chemistryPolymer chemistryWaste managementEngineeringBiochemistryMembrane Separation and Gas TransportSynthesis and properties of polymersCovalent Organic Framework Applications