(309a) Carbon Nanostructure-Mediated Ultra-Rapid Separation | AIChE

(309a) Carbon Nanostructure-Mediated Ultra-Rapid Separation

Authors 

Kaneko, K. - Presenter, Shinshu University
Highly rapid separation has been requested for energy saving technologies. If the separation rate is quite small regardless of the high selectivity, the separation is energy intensive. We must challenge the highly rapid separation with a high selectivity using adsorption or membrane separation. This presentation will show the very rapid adsorption separation of isotopic O2 and ultrafast membrane separation of air and H2 with carbon nanostructured materials. Dynamic adsorption of mixed 18O2 and 16O2 around 112 K on nanoporous carbons having in-pore narrow sites gives high adsorption selectivity of > 5 within 30 min [1], being more than 100 times larger than the current separation technology. 18O2 is indispensable to advanced medical imaging for cancer detection. This adsorption separation is possible around the boiling temperature of methane, which is accessable through cryogenic liquified-natural-gas technology. Ultrafast separation of H2 from CH4 is requisite for construction of the steady hydrogen energy society. we developed a graphene-wrapped MFI zeolite molecular-sieving membrane for the ultrafast separation of H2 from CH4 at a permeability reaching 5.8 × 106 barrers at a single gas selectivity of 245, whose permeability is 100 times larger than the previously developed ones. The subnanoscale interface space between the graphene and zeolite surface enables such an ultrafast separation [2]. Highly efficient air separation is key to construct an energy saving technologies. MD study on nanowindows with concerted rim motions in graphene showed the promising direction for ultrafast air separation[3].

[1] S. Kumar, A. Bagusetty, Y. Gogotsi, J. K. Johnson, K. Kaneko et al , Nature Comm. 2021,12, 546- 556.[2] R. Kukobat, M. Sakai, H. Tanaka, C. Lastoskie, M. Matsukata, T. Hayashi, K. Kaneko et al. Sci. Adv. In press. [3] F. Vallejos-Burgos, F.-X. Coudert, K. Kaneko, Nature Comm. 2018, 9,1812-1821.