Gas permeation through single-crystal ZIF-8 membranes

Jan 15, 2019·
C. chen
,
A. ozcan
,
A. o. yazaydin
Prof. Dr. Bradley P. Ladewig
Prof. Dr. Bradley P. Ladewig
· 0 min read
Abstract
Grain boundaries are an unavoidable microstructural feature in intergrown polycrystalline metal-organic framework (MOF) membranes. They have been suspected to be less size-selective than a MOF’s micropores, resulting in suboptimal separation performances – a speculation recently confirmed by transmission electron microscopy of MOF ZIF-8. Single-crystal membranes, without grain boundaries, should confine mass transport to micropores and reflect the intrinsic selectivity of the porous material. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of fabricating single-crystal MOF membranes and directly measuring gas permeability through such a membrane using ZIF-8 as an exemplary MOF. Our single-crystal ZIF-8 membranes achieved ideal selectivities up to 28.9, 10.0, 40.1 and 3.6 for gas pairs CO2/N2, CO2/CH4, He/CH4 and CH4/N2 respectively, much higher than or reversely selective to over 20 polycrystalline ZIF-8 membranes, unequivocally proving the non-selectivity of grain boundaries. The permeability trend obtained in single-crystal membranes aligned with a force field that had been validated against multiple empirical adsorption isotherms.
Type
Publication
Journal of Membrane Science
Authors
Authors
Prof. Dr. Bradley P. Ladewig
Authors
Professor
Prof. Dr. Bradley P. Ladewig is Paul Wurth Chair of Energy Process Engineering in the Department of Engineering, and Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Science, Technology and Medicine, at the University of Luxembourg.