Carbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separations

Olefin/paraffin separation is a large potential market for membrane applications. Carbon molecular sieve membranes (CMS) are promising for this application due to the intrinsically high separation performance and the viability for practical scale-up. Intrinsically high separation performance of CMS...

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Main Author: Xu, Liren
Other Authors: Koros, William
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/50130
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-501302014-05-07T03:42:55ZCarbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separationsXu, LirenGas separationsCarbon molecular sieveEthylene/ethaneMembrane-distillationPropylene/propaneHollow fiberMembraneOlefin/paraffinAlkenesMembrane separationMolecular sievesGas separation membranesOlefin/paraffin separation is a large potential market for membrane applications. Carbon molecular sieve membranes (CMS) are promising for this application due to the intrinsically high separation performance and the viability for practical scale-up. Intrinsically high separation performance of CMS membranes for olefin/paraffin separations was demonstrated. The translation of intrinsic CMS transport properties into the hollow fiber configuration is considered in detail. Substructure collapse of asymmetric hollow fibers was found during Matrimidᆴ CMS hollow fiber formation. To overcome the permeance loss due to the increased separation layer thickness, 6FDA-DAM and 6FDA/BPDA-DAM polyimides with higher rigidity were employed as alternative precursors, and significant improvement has been achieved. Besides the macroscopic morphology control of asymmetric hollow fibers, the micro-structure was tuned by optimizing pyrolysis temperature protocol and pyrolysis atmosphere. In addition, unexpected physical aging was observed in CMS membranes, which is analogous to the aging phenomenon in glassy polymers. For performance evaluation, multiple "proof-of-concept" tests validated the viability of CMS membranes under realistic conditions. The scope of this work was expanded from binary ethylene/ethane and propylene/propane separations for the debottlenecking purpose to mixed carbon number hydrocarbon processing. CMS membranes were found to be olefins-selective over corresponding paraffins; moreover, CMS membranes are able to effectively fractionate the complex cracked gas stream in a preferable way. Reconfiguration of the hydrocarbon processing in ethylene plants is possible based on the unique CMS membranes.Georgia Institute of TechnologyKoros, William2014-01-10T18:00:00Z2014-01-10T18:00:00Z2013-09-25Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/50130en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Gas separations
Carbon molecular sieve
Ethylene/ethane
Membrane-distillation
Propylene/propane
Hollow fiber
Membrane
Olefin/paraffin
Alkenes
Membrane separation
Molecular sieves
Gas separation membranes
spellingShingle Gas separations
Carbon molecular sieve
Ethylene/ethane
Membrane-distillation
Propylene/propane
Hollow fiber
Membrane
Olefin/paraffin
Alkenes
Membrane separation
Molecular sieves
Gas separation membranes
Xu, Liren
Carbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separations
description Olefin/paraffin separation is a large potential market for membrane applications. Carbon molecular sieve membranes (CMS) are promising for this application due to the intrinsically high separation performance and the viability for practical scale-up. Intrinsically high separation performance of CMS membranes for olefin/paraffin separations was demonstrated. The translation of intrinsic CMS transport properties into the hollow fiber configuration is considered in detail. Substructure collapse of asymmetric hollow fibers was found during Matrimidᆴ CMS hollow fiber formation. To overcome the permeance loss due to the increased separation layer thickness, 6FDA-DAM and 6FDA/BPDA-DAM polyimides with higher rigidity were employed as alternative precursors, and significant improvement has been achieved. Besides the macroscopic morphology control of asymmetric hollow fibers, the micro-structure was tuned by optimizing pyrolysis temperature protocol and pyrolysis atmosphere. In addition, unexpected physical aging was observed in CMS membranes, which is analogous to the aging phenomenon in glassy polymers. For performance evaluation, multiple "proof-of-concept" tests validated the viability of CMS membranes under realistic conditions. The scope of this work was expanded from binary ethylene/ethane and propylene/propane separations for the debottlenecking purpose to mixed carbon number hydrocarbon processing. CMS membranes were found to be olefins-selective over corresponding paraffins; moreover, CMS membranes are able to effectively fractionate the complex cracked gas stream in a preferable way. Reconfiguration of the hydrocarbon processing in ethylene plants is possible based on the unique CMS membranes.
author2 Koros, William
author_facet Koros, William
Xu, Liren
author Xu, Liren
author_sort Xu, Liren
title Carbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separations
title_short Carbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separations
title_full Carbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separations
title_fullStr Carbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separations
title_full_unstemmed Carbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separations
title_sort carbon molecular sieve hollow fiber membranes for olefin/paraffin separations
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/50130
work_keys_str_mv AT xuliren carbonmolecularsievehollowfibermembranesforolefinparaffinseparations
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