A simple approach was developed to synthesize the carbon/zeolite T composite membrane materials with the high gas separation performance. The precursors of the composite membrane were composed of polyimide matrix and dispersed zeolite T particles. The composite membranes prepared by pyrolysis at 973K show excellent gas (H2, CO2, O2, N2, CH4) permeability and selectivity (O2/N2, CO2/CH4) for both single gas and mixed-gas. The gas separation performance of the composite membranes could be controlled in a wide range by changing only the zeolite T particle size. The maximum selectivity of O2 over N2 (21/79mol%) for the composite membranes with the least zeolite T particle (0.5μm) was 15 with an O2 permeability of 347 Barrers (1 Barrer = 7.5 x 10-18m2sPa) and the selectivity of CO2 over CH4 (50/50 mol%) reaches a value of 179 with a CO2 permeability of 1532 Barrers. It was believed that the increase of gas permeability was attributed to the ordered microchannels in the zeolite and the interfacial gaps formed between zeolite and carbon matrix in the composite membranes. And the gas selectivity was tuned by the size of interfacial gaps which were varied with the zeolite particle size. This technique will provide a simple and convenient route to efficiently improve the trade-off relationship between the permeability and the selectivity and enable the construction of carbon-based composite materials with novel functionalities in membrane science.
Controlled Synthesis of High Performance Carbon/Zeolite T Composite Membrane Materials for Gas Separation. Q.Liu, T.Wang, H.Guo, C.Liang, S.Liu, Z.Zhang, Y.Cao, D.S.Su, J.Qiu: Microporous and Mesoporous Materials, 2009, 120[3], 460-6