Abstract
In situ powder XRD measurements showed that adsorption causes the NaA zeolite unit cell to contract or expand, and these changes depend on adsorbate loading. Changes in zeolite crystal size correlated with permeation changes through NaA zeolite membranes. These membranes had high water/alcohol pervaporation selectivities, even though gas permeation was mainly through defects, as indicated by Knudsen selectivities for single gas permeation. At 300. K and a thermodynamic activity of 0.03, water contracted the NaA crystals by 0.22 vol%, and this contraction increased the helium flux through two NaA membranes by approximately 80%. Crystal contraction also increased the fluxes of i-butane during vapor permeation and i-propanol (IPA) during pervaporation (∼0.03 wt% water). At activities above 0.07, water expanded NaA crystals and correspondingly decreased the fluxes of helium, i-butane, and IPA through NaA zeolite membranes. Methanol also contracted NaA crystals, but by only 0.05 vol% at an activity of 0.02, and this contraction slightly increased the helium and i-butane fluxes through a NaA membrane. Above an activity of 0.06, methanol expanded the NaA crystals, and the fluxes of helium and i-butane through a NaA membrane decreased. These adsorbate-induced changes explain some pervaporation behavior reported by others, and they indicate that crystal expansion and contraction may increase or decrease zeolite NaA membrane selectivity by changing the defect sizes.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 413-420 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Journal of Membrane Science |
Volume | 366 |
Issue number | 1-2 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jan 1 2011 |
Funding
Acknowledgment is made to the Donors of the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund for partial support of this research. A portion of this research was conducted at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, which is sponsored at Oak Ridge National Laboratory by the Division of Scientific User Facilities, U.S. Department of Energy. We gratefully acknowledge support by a Department of Education GAANN fellowship to SGS, and the Scientific User Facilities Division, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, U.S. Department of Energy . We thank Dr. Yanfeng Zhang for preparing the zeolite crystals and one of the membranes.
Keywords
- Pervaporation
- Water/alcohol separations
- X-ray diffraction
- Zeolite A crystal
- Zeolite expansion/contraction