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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Tuning Selectivities in Gas Separation Membranes Based on Polymer-Grafted Nanoparticles

Daniele ParisiChristopher J. DurningMichael RubinsteinYucheng HuangMarcel DickmannFerruccio DoghieriBrian C. BenicewiczZaid M. AbbasZaid M. AbbasArash NikoubashmanDimitris VlassopoulosMatteo MinelliConnor BilchakJacques JestinSanat K. KumarFrancesco M. BenedettiJiarul MidyaZachary P. SmithLudwik LeiblerMayank JhalariaWerner Egger

subject

Materials scienceheterogeneous transport mediaimproved selective transportSynthetic membraneGeneral Physics and AstronomyNanoparticlegas separation membraneContext (language use)02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesGeneral Materials ScienceGas separationfree volume distributionchemistry.chemical_classificationpolymer-grafted nanoparticlesGeneral EngineeringPolymer021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesMembranechemistryChemical engineeringVolume (thermodynamics)mixed matrix membrane0210 nano-technologySelectivity

description

Polymer membranes are critical to many sustainability applications that require the size-based separation of gas mixtures. Despite their ubiquity, there is a continuing need to selectively affect the transport of different mixture components while enhancing mechanical strength and hindering aging. Polymer-grafted nanoparticles (GNPs) have recently been explored in the context of gas separations. Membranes made from pure GNPs have higher gas permeability and lower selectivity relative to the neat polymer because they have increased mean free volume. Going beyond this ability to manipulate the mean free volume by grafting chains to a nanoparticle, the conceptual advance of the present work is our finding that GNPs are spatially heterogeneous transport media, with this free volume distribution being easily manipulated by the addition of free polymer. In particular, adding a small amount of appropriately chosen free polymer can increase the membrane gas selectivity by up to two orders of magnitude while only moderately reducing small gas permeability. Added short free chains, which are homogeneously distributed in the polymer layer of the GNP, reduce the permeability of all gases but yield no dramatic increases in selectivity. In contrast, free chains with length comparable to the grafts, which populate the interstitial pockets between GNPs, preferentially hinder the transport of the larger gas and thus result in large selectivity increases. This work thus establishes that we can favorably manipulate the selective gas transport properties of GNP membranes through the entropic effects associated with the addition of free chains.

10.1021/acsnano.0c07049http://hdl.handle.net/11585/795940