Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor

The gas-liquid membrane contactor (GLMC) is a promising alternative gas absorption/desorption configuration for effective carbon dioxide (CO₂) capture. The physicochemical properties of membranes may synergistically affect GLMC performances, especially during the long-term operations. In this work,...

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Main Authors: Xu, Yilin, Malde, Chandresh, Wang, Rong
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147595
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1475952021-05-07T05:50:12Z Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor Xu, Yilin Malde, Chandresh Wang, Rong School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Interdisciplinary Graduate School (IGS) Singapore Membrane Technology Centre Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute Engineering::Environmental engineering Gas-liquid Membrane Contactor CO₂ Absorption The gas-liquid membrane contactor (GLMC) is a promising alternative gas absorption/desorption configuration for effective carbon dioxide (CO₂) capture. The physicochemical properties of membranes may synergistically affect GLMC performances, especially during the long-term operations. In this work, commercial polypropylene (PP) and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) hollow fiber (HF) membranes were applied to explore the effects of their physicochemical properties on long-term CO₂ absorption performances in a bench-scale GLMC rig. PP membranes with pore size of 19 nm, thickness of 0.046 mm, and porosity of 58% achieved high CO₂ flux when feeding pure CO₂ (5.4 and 24.4×10 mol/m .s using absorbents of water and 1M monoethanolamine (MEA), respectively) whereas PVDF membranes with pore size of 24 nm, thickness of 0.343 mm, and porosity of 84% presented a good CO₂ separation performance from the simulated biogas using 1M MEA (6.8×10 mol/m .s and 99.9% CH recovery). When using water as absorbent, the coupled phenomena of membrane wetting and fouling restricted CO₂ transport and resulted in continuous flux loss during the long-term operations. When using MEA as absorbent, both PP and PVDF membranes suffered dramatic flux decline. A series of membrane characterization tests revealed that the morphology, pore size, hydrophobicity, and stability of selected commercial membranes were greatly affected by MEA attack during long-term operations. Therefore, the selection criterion of microporous membranes for high-efficiency and long-term stable CO₂ absorption in GLMC processes was proposed. It is envisioned that this study can shed light on improving existing membrane fabrication procedures and the application of novel membrane surface modification techniques to facilitate practical applications of the GLMC technology. Economic Development Board (EDB) Published version This work was funded by the Johnson Matthey Public Limited Company. We also acknowledge funding support from the Singapore Economic Development Board to the Singapore Membrane Technology Centre. 2021-05-07T05:50:12Z 2021-05-07T05:50:12Z 2020 Journal Article Xu, Y., Malde, C. & Wang, R. (2020). Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor. Journal of Membrane Science and Research, 6(1), 30-39. https://dx.doi.org/10.22079/JMSR.2019.107096.1262 2476-5406 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147595 10.22079/JMSR.2019.107096.1262 2-s2.0-85077443121 1 6 30 39 en Journal of Membrane Science and Research © 2020 MPRL. All rights reserved. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Environmental engineering
Gas-liquid Membrane Contactor
CO₂ Absorption
spellingShingle Engineering::Environmental engineering
Gas-liquid Membrane Contactor
CO₂ Absorption
Xu, Yilin
Malde, Chandresh
Wang, Rong
Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor
description The gas-liquid membrane contactor (GLMC) is a promising alternative gas absorption/desorption configuration for effective carbon dioxide (CO₂) capture. The physicochemical properties of membranes may synergistically affect GLMC performances, especially during the long-term operations. In this work, commercial polypropylene (PP) and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) hollow fiber (HF) membranes were applied to explore the effects of their physicochemical properties on long-term CO₂ absorption performances in a bench-scale GLMC rig. PP membranes with pore size of 19 nm, thickness of 0.046 mm, and porosity of 58% achieved high CO₂ flux when feeding pure CO₂ (5.4 and 24.4×10 mol/m .s using absorbents of water and 1M monoethanolamine (MEA), respectively) whereas PVDF membranes with pore size of 24 nm, thickness of 0.343 mm, and porosity of 84% presented a good CO₂ separation performance from the simulated biogas using 1M MEA (6.8×10 mol/m .s and 99.9% CH recovery). When using water as absorbent, the coupled phenomena of membrane wetting and fouling restricted CO₂ transport and resulted in continuous flux loss during the long-term operations. When using MEA as absorbent, both PP and PVDF membranes suffered dramatic flux decline. A series of membrane characterization tests revealed that the morphology, pore size, hydrophobicity, and stability of selected commercial membranes were greatly affected by MEA attack during long-term operations. Therefore, the selection criterion of microporous membranes for high-efficiency and long-term stable CO₂ absorption in GLMC processes was proposed. It is envisioned that this study can shed light on improving existing membrane fabrication procedures and the application of novel membrane surface modification techniques to facilitate practical applications of the GLMC technology.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Xu, Yilin
Malde, Chandresh
Wang, Rong
format Article
author Xu, Yilin
Malde, Chandresh
Wang, Rong
author_sort Xu, Yilin
title Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor
title_short Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor
title_full Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor
title_fullStr Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor
title_full_unstemmed Correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with CO₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor
title_sort correlating physicochemical properties of commercial membranes with co₂ absorption performance in gas-liquid membrane contactor
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147595
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