Title: Gas Separation Membranes
1Gas Separation Membranes
- Properties, Synthesis Applications
- By
- M.Wadah Jawich
2Gas Separation Membranes
- Types of Membranes
- Isotropic Membranes
- Microporous Membranes
- Nonporous, Dense Membranes
- Electrically Charged Membranes
- Anisotropic Membranes
- Ceramic, Metal and Liquid Membranes
3- Membrane Processes
- Developed membrane separation industrial
technologies - Microfiltration and Ultrafiltration
- Reverse osmosis
- Electrodialysis
- Developing industrial membrane separation
technologies - Gas separation
- Pervaporation
- To-be-developed membrane separation technologies
- Carrier facilitated transport
- Membrane contactors
- Piezodialysis membrane
4- Gas Separation Membrane
- Membrane Materials and Structure
- Metal Membranes
- Polymeric Membranes
- Ceramic and Zeolite Membranes
- Mixed-matrix Membranes
- Applications of Gas Separation Membranes
- Natural Gas Separations
- Dehydration
- H2 Separation
5- Ceramic Membranes for Gas Separation
- Preparation of Ceramic Membranes
- Slip Casting
- Tape Casting
- Pressing
- Extrusion
- Sol-Gel Process
- Dip Coating
- Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)
- Industrial Ceramic Membranes
- Zeolite membranes
- Silica membranes
- Carbon membranes
- Summary and Conclusion
6Introduction
- In general, a membrane can be described as a
permselective barrier or a fine sieve. - Permeability and separation factor of a ceramic
membrane are the two most important performance
indicators . - For a porous ceramic membrane, they are typically
governed by - Thickness
- Pore size
- Surface porosity of the membrane.
7What Does A Ceramic Membrane Consist Of?
- Ceramic membranes are usually composite ones
consisting of several layers of one or more
different ceramic materials. - They generally have
- A macroporous support
- One or two mesoporous intermediate layers
- And a microporous (or a dense) top layer.
- The bottom layer provides mechanical support,
while the middle layers bridge the pore size
differences between the support layer and the top
layer where the actual separation takes place. - Commonly used materials for ceramic membranes
are Al2O3, TiO2, ZrO2, SiO2 etc. or a combination
of these materials. - Most commercial ceramic membranes are in disc,
plate or tubular configuration in order to
increase the surface area to volume ratio , which
gives more separation area per unit volume of
membrane element
8(No Transcript)
9SEM micrograph of a layered ceramic membrane for
oxygen permeation
10??? A Brief Overview On The Development of
Artificial Membranes
- Systematic studies of membrane phenomena can be
traced to the eighteenth century philosopher
scientists. - Through the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries, membranes had no industrial or
commercial uses, but were used as laboratory
tools to develop physical/chemical theories. - The period from 1960 to 1980 produced a
significant change in the status of membrane
technology. - Building on the original LoebSourirajan
technique. Other membrane formation processes,
including interfacial polymerization and
multilayer composite casting and coating, were
developed for making high performance membranes
with selective layers as thin as 0.1 µm or less . -
- Methods of packaging membranes into
large-membrane-area spiral-wound,
hollow-fine-fiber, capillary, and plate-and-frame
modules were also developed
11- By 1980, microfiltration, ultrafiltration,
reverse osmosis and electrodialysis were all
established processes with large plants installed
worldwide. - The principal development in the 1980s was the
emergence of industrial membrane gas separation
processes. The first major development was the
Monsanto Prism membrane for hydrogen separation,
introduced in 1980. - Within a few years, Dow was producing systems to
separate nitrogen from air, and Cynara and
Separex were producing systems to separate carbon
dioxide from natural gas. - The final development of the 1980s was the
introduction by GFT, a small German engineering
company, of the first commercial pervaporation
systems for dehydration of alcohol. - Gas separation technology is evolving and
expanding rapidly further substantial growth
will be seen in the coming years
12Types Of Membranes
- A- Isotropic Membranes
- 1- Microporous Membranes
- 2- Nonporous, Dense Membranes
- 3- Electrically Charged Membranes
- B-Anisotropic Membranes
- C- Ceramic, Metal and Liquid Membranes
13- Isotropic Membranes.
- 1- Microporous Membranes
- A microporous membrane is very similar in
structure and function to a conventional filter.
It has a rigid, highly voided structure with
randomly distributed, interconnected pores. - However, these pores differ from those in a
conventional filter by being extremely small, on
the order of 0.01 to 10 µm in diameter. - All particles larger than the largest pores are
completely rejected by the membrane. Separation
of solutes by microporous membranes is mainly a
function of molecular size and pore size
distribution.
14- 2- Nonporous, Dense Membranes.
- Nonporous, dense membranes consist of a dense
film through which permeants are transported by
diffusion under the driving force of a pressure,
concentration, or electrical potential gradient. - The separation of various components of a
mixture is related directly to their relative
transport rate within the membrane, which is
determined by their diffusivity and solubility in
the membrane material.
15- 3- Electrically Charged Membranes.
-
- Electrically charged membranes can be dense or
microporous, but are most commonly very finely
microporous, with the pore walls carrying fixed
positively or negatively charged ions. - A membrane with fixed positively charged ions
is referred to as an anion-exchange membrane
because it binds anions in the surrounding fluid.
Similarly, a membrane containing fixed negatively
charged ions is called a cation-exchange
membrane. - Separation with charged membranes is achieved
mainly by exclusion of ions of the same charge as
the fixed ions of the membrane structure, and to
a much lesser extent by the pore size. - The separation is affected by the charge and
concentration of the ions in solution.
16(No Transcript)
17- Anisotropic Membranes
- The transport rate of a species through a
membrane is inversely proportional to the
membrane thickness. High transport rates are
desirable in membrane separation processes for
economic reasons therefore, the membrane should
be as thin as possible. - The advantages of the anisotropic membranes is
higher fluxes. The separation properties and
permeation rates of the membrane are determined
exclusively by the surface layer the
substructure functions as a mechanical support. -
18Anisotropic membranes consist of an extremely
thin surface layer supported on a much thicker,
porous substructure. The surface layer and its
substructure may be formed in a single operation
or separately
19- Ceramic, Metal and Liquid Membranes
- Ceramic membranes, a special class of
microporous membranes, are being used in
ultrafiltration and microfiltration applications
for which solvent resistance and thermal
stability are required . -
- Dense metal membranes, particularly palladium
membranes, are being considered for the
separation of hydrogen from gas mixtures, and
supported liquid films are being developed for
carrier-facilitated transport processes
20Membrane Processes
- A- Developed membrane separation industrial
technologies - 1- Microfiltration and Ultrafiltration
- 2- Reverse osmosis
- 3- Electrodialysis
- B- Developing industrial membrane separation
technologies - 1- Gas separation
- 2- Pervaporation
- C- To-be-developed membrane separation
technologies - 1- Carrier facilitated transport
- 2-Membrane contactors
- 3-Piezodialysis membrane
21- A- Developed Membrane Separation Industrial
Technologies - 1- Microfiltration and Ultrafiltration
- In ultrafiltration and microfiltration
the mode of separation is molecular sieving
through increasingly fine pores. - - Microfiltration membranes filter colloidal
particles and bacteria - -Ultrafiltration membranes can filter dissolved
macromolecules, such as proteins, from
solutions - 2- Reverse osmosis.
- In osmosis membranes the membrane
pores are so small and are within the range of
thermal motion of the polymer chains that form
the membrane. - The accepted mechanism of transport
through these membranes is called the
solution-diffusion model.
22- 3- Electrodialysis
- A charged membranes are used to
separate ions from aqueous solutions under the
driving force of an electrical potential
difference. - The process utilizes an electrodialysis
stack, built on the filter-press principle and
containing several hundred individual cells, each
formed by a pair of anion and cation exchange
membranes. -
23- B- Developing Membrane Separation Industrial
Technologies - 1- Gas separation
- In gas separation, a gas mixture at an
elevated - pressure is passed across the surface of a
membr- - ane that is selectively permeable to one
com- - ponent of the feed mixture the membrane
permeate is enriched in this species. - Major current applications of gas
separation membranes are the separation of
hydrogen from nitrogen, argon and methane in
ammonia plants the production of nitrogen from
air and the separation of carbon dioxide from
methane in natural gas operations -
24- 2- Pervaporation
- In pervaporation, a liquid mixture contacts
one side of a membrane, and the permeate is
removed as a vapor from the other. The driving
force for the process is the low vapor pressure
on the permeate side of the membrane generated by
cooling and condensing the permeate vapor. - Pervaporation offers the possibility of
separating closely boiling mixtures or azeotropes
that are difficult to separate by distillation or
other means (the dehydration of 9095 ethanol
solutions) -
25- C- To-Be- Developed Membrane Separation
Technologies - 1- Carrier Facilitated Transport
- It employs liquid membranes containing a
complexing or carrier agent. The carrier agent
reacts with one component of a mixture on the
feed side of the membrane and then diffuses
across the membrane to release the permeant on
the product side of the membrane. - 2- Membrane Contactors
- Membrane contactors are devices that allow a
gaseous phase and a liquid phase to come into
direct contact with each other, for the purpose
of mass transfer between the phases, without
dispersing one phase into the other. - A typical use for these devices is the removal
or dissolution of gases in water. -
26- 3- Piezodialysis Membrane
- If fixed-ions of both anion and cation species
are attach to a polymeric membrane, pressure can
be used as the driving force to transport both
ions of a salt across a single membrane, leaving
a diluted aqueous stream on the pressurized side. - A zeolite-based piezodialysis membranes are
being developed for desalination processes and
some medical applications in urology and
cardiology -
27Gas Separation Membranes
- Membrane Materials and Structure
- Metal Membranes
- Polymeric Membranes
- Ceramic and Zeolite Membranes
- Mixed-matrix Membranes
- Applications of Gas Separation Membranes
- Natural Gas Separations
- Dehydration
- H2 Separation
-
28- Theoretical Background
- Both porous and dense membranes can be used as
selective gas separation barriers Three types of
porous membranes, differing in pore size, are
shown in the figure below. - If the pores size 0.1 to 10 µm
- gt Gases permeate the membrane by convective
flow, and no separation occurs. - If the pores are lt 0.1 µm
- gt The pore diameter is the mean free
path of the gas molecules - gt Diffusion through such pores is governed by
Knudsen diffusion, and the
transport rate of any gas is inversely
proportional to the square root of its
- molecular weight.
29- If the pores are extremely small, of the order
520 A - gt gases are separated by molecular sieving.
- gt Transport includes both diffusion in the gas
phase and diffusion of adsorbed - species on the surface of the
pores (surface diffusion).
30Membrane Materials and Structure
- 1- Metal Membranes
- - The study of gas permeation through metals
began with Grahams observation of hydrogen
permeation through palladium. - - Hydrogen permeates a number of metals
including palladium, tantalum, niobium,
vanadium, nickel, iron, copper, cobalt and
platinum. -
- - In most cases, the metal membrane must be
operated at high temperatures (gt300 ?C) to obtain
useful permeation rates and to prevent
embrittlement and cracking of the metal by
adsorbed hydrogen. - -Hydrogen-permeable metal membranes are
extraordinarily selective, being extremely
permeable to hydrogen but essentially impermeable
to all other gases.
31- Hydrogen permeation through a metal membrane is
believed to follow the multistep process
illustrated in the figure
32- 2- Polymeric Membranes
- - Early gas separation membranes were adapted
from the cellulose acetate membranes produced for
reverse osmosis. -
- - These membranes are produced by precipitation
in water the water must be removed before the
membranes can be used to separate gases. - gt The capillary forces generated as the liquid
evaporates cause collapse of the finely
microporous substrate of the cellulose acetate
membrane, destroying its usefulness. - - This problem has been overcome by a solvent
exchange process in which the water is first
exchanged for an alcohol, then for hexane. - - Experience has shown that gas separation
membranes are far more sensitive to minor
defects, such as pinholes in the selective
membrane layer, than membranes used in reverse
osmosis or ultrafiltration
33(No Transcript)
34- 3- Ceramic and Zeolite Membranes
- - These microporous membranes are made from
aluminum, titanium or silica oxides. - - Ceramic membranes have the advantages of
being chemically inert and stable at high
temperatures, conditions under which polymer
membranes fail. - -This stability makes ceramic
microfiltration/ultrafiltration membranes
particularly suitable for food, biotechnology and
pharmaceutical applications. - - These membranes are all multilayer composite
structures formed by coating a thin selective
ceramic or zeolite layer onto a microporous
ceramic support. - - Ceramic membranes are prepared by the solgel
process - - Zeolite membranes are prepared by direct
crystallization, in which the thin zeolite layer
is crystallized at high pressure and temperature
directly onto the microporous support.
35- 4- Mixed-Matrix Membranes
- - The ceramic and zeolite membranes have
exceptional selectivities for a number of
important separations. However, the membranes are
not easy to make and expensive for many
separations. - - One solution to this problem is to prepare
membranes from materials consisting of zeolite
particles dispersed in a polymer matrix. -
- - These membranes are expected to combine the
selectivity of zeolite membranes with the low
cost and ease of manufacture of polymer
membranes. Such membranes are called
mixed-matrix membranes.
36Applications of Ceramic Membranes
- 1- Natural Gas Separations
- - The major component of raw natural gas is
methane, typically 7590 of the total. Natural
gas also contains significant amounts of ethane,
some propane and butane, and 13 of other higher
hydrocarbons. In addition, the gas contains
undesirable impurities water, carbon dioxide,
nitrogen and hydrogen sulfide. - - To minimize recompression costs at gas
processing plants, impurities must be removed
from the gas, leaving the methane, ethane, and
other hydrocarbons in the high-pressure residue
gas. - -Carbon dioxide is best separated by glassy
membranes (utilizing size selectivity) - - Hydrogen sulfide, which is larger and more
condensable than carbon dioxide, is best
separated by rubbery membranes (utilizing
sorption selectivity). - - Propane and other hydrocarbons, because of
their condensability, are best separated from
methane with rubbery sorption-selective membranes.
37The relative size and condensability (boiling
point) of the principal components of natural
gas. Glassy membranes generally separate by
differences in size rubbery membranes separate
by differences in condensability
38- 2- Dehydration
- - All natural gas must be dried before entering
the national distribution pipeline to control
corrosion of the pipeline and to prevent
formation of solid hydrocarbon/water hydrates
that can choke valves. - - Currently glycol dehydrators are widely
used. However, glycol dehydrators are not well
suited for use on small gas streams or on
offshore platforms, increasingly common sources
of natural gas - - Membrane processes offer an alternative
approach to natural gas dehydration. Two possible
process designs are available. -
- In the first design, a small one-stage system
removes 90 of the water in the feed gas,
producing a low-pressure permeate gas
representing 56 of the initial gas flow. This
gas contains the removed water - In the second design, the wet, low-pressure
permeate gas is recompressed and cooled, so the
water vapor condenses and is removed as liquid
water. The natural gas that permeates the
membrane is then recovered, but the capital cost
of the system approximately doubles
39Dehydration of natural gas is easily performed by
membranes but high cost may limit its scope to
niche applications.
40- 3- H2 Separation
- -It is desirable to develop inorganic zeolite
membranes that are capable of highly selective H2
separation from other light gases (CO2, CH4, CO).
- -Currently used zeolite membranes have not been
successful for H2 separation, because they either
have zeolite pores too big for separating H2 from
other light gases or have many non-zeolite pores
bigger than the zeolite pores, so called defects. -
- -To selectively separate H2 from other light
gases (CO, CO2, CH4), the zeolite membrane will
have to discriminate between molecules that are
approximately 0.3-0.4 nm in size and 0.1 nm or
less in size difference. - -To accomplish this sieving we need to
-
- A- Synthesize zeolite membranes with small
pore in this size range - B- Post-treat existing zeolite membranes to
systematically reduce the pore size
and/or the number of defects.
41Ceramic Membranes
- Preparation of Ceramic Membranes
- Slip Casting
- Tape Casting
- Pressing
- Extrusion
- Sol-Gel Process
- Dip Coating
- Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)
- Indusrtial Ceramic Membranes
- Zeolite membranes
- Silica membranes
- Carbon membranes
-
42Ceramic Membranes For Gas Separation
- There are two types of ceramic membranes suitable
for gas separations (1) dense and (2) porous,
especially microporous, membranes. - Dense Ceramic Membranes are made from
crystalline ceramic materials such as fluorites,
which allow permeation of only oxygen or hydrogen
through the crystal lattice. Therefore, they are
mostly impermeable to all other gases, giving
extremely high selectivity towards oxygen or
hydrogen. - Microporous Ceramic Membranes with pore sizes
less than 2 nm. - - They are mainly composed of amorphous
silica or zeolites. - - They are usually prepared as a thin film
supported on a macroporous ceramic support,
which provides mechanical strength, but offers
minimal gas transfer resistances. - - In most cases, some intermediate layers are
required between the macroporous support and the
top separation layer to bridge the gap between
the large pores of the support and the small
pores of the top separation layer.
43Preparation of Ceramic Membranes
- In general, preparation of ceramic membranes
involves several steps -
- (1) Formation of particle suspensions.
-
- (2) Packing of the particles in the suspensions
into a membrane precursor with a certain shape
such as flat sheet, monolith or tube -
- (3) Consolidation of the membrane precursor by a
heat treatment at high temperatures.
44 A generalized flow sheet for preparation of
ceramic membranes using various conventional
methods
45- 1- Slip Casting
- - When a well mixed powder suspension (slurry)
is poured into a porous mould, solvent of
suspension is extracted into the pores of the
mould via the capillary driving force or
capillary suction. The slip particles are,
therefore, consolidated on the surface of the
mould to form a layer of particles or a gel
layer.
46- 2- Tape Casting
- - The process consists of a stationary casting
knife, a reservoir for powder suspensions, a
moving carrier and a drying zone. In preparing
flat sheet ceramic membranes, the powder
suspension is poured into a reservoir behind the
casting knife, and the carrier to be cast upon is
set in motion. -
- -The casting knife gap between the knife blade
and carrier determines the thickness of the cast
layer. Other variables which are important
include reservoir depth, speed of carrier and
viscosity of the powder suspension. -
- -The wet cast layer passes into a drying
chamber, and the solvent is evaporated from
surface, leaving a dry membrane precursor on the
carrier surface.
47(No Transcript)
48- 3- Pressing
- - The particle consolidation into a dense
layer occurs by an applied force. This easily
handled pressure press method has been frequently
employed in screening new ionic and mixed
conducting materials for development of oxygen or
hydrogen permeable ceramic membranes. - - A special press machine is used to apply more
than 100 MPa pressure to press powders into a
compacted disc. The diameter of the disc is
usually a few of cm, the thickness is often
around 0.5 mm and the disc is dense after firing.
49(No Transcript)
50- 4- Extrusion
- - The extrusion process is similar to fibre
spinning processes, but there are a few
differences between extrusion and spinning. - In extrusion a stiff paste is compacted and
shaped by forcing it through a nozzle. A
requirement is that the precursor should exhibit
plastic behavior, that is at lower stresses
behave like a rigid solid and deform only when
the stress reaches a certain value called the
yield stress. - In spinning a viscous solution or suspension is
transformed into a stable shape in a coagulation
bath through a spinneret. - In addition, the precursor made by extrusion
possesses a homogeneous structure over the cross
section, while it shows an asymmetric structure
if prepared through the spinning process.
51(No Transcript)
52- 5- Sol-Gel Process
- - The advantage of the sol-gel technique is
that the pore size of the membrane can be
desirably controlled, especially for small pores.
- - There are two main routes through which the
sol-gel membrane is prepared -
- (1) The colloidal route, in which a metal salt
is mixed with water to form a sol. The
sol is coated on a membrane support, where it
forms a colloidal gel. -
- (2) The polymer route, in which metalorganic
precursors are mixed with organic solvent to form
a sol, which is then coated on a membrane
support, where it forms a polymer gel.
53- 5- Sol-Gel Process
- - The Colloidal sols are the colloidal
solutions of dense oxide particles such as Al2O3,
SiO2, TiO2 or ZrO2. - - For gas separation based on molecular sieving
effects, ceramic membranes with pore sizes less
than 1 nm must be employed. - gt In this case, the membrane can be prepared
through the polymer sol route using the
?-alumina membrane as a support. - - It should be noted that in the polymer sol
route, the pore size of the membrane prepared is
determined by the degree of branching of the
inorganic polymer. - - Sols of very small particles are prepared
through hydrolysis and condensation of their
corresponding alkoxides. - gt The partial charges of the metal in the
alkoxides and hydrolyses speed influence the
hydrolysis behavior
54(No Transcript)
55- 6- Dip Coating
- - The critical factors in dip coating are the
viscosity of the particle suspension and the
coating speed or time. - - The drying process starts simultaneously with
the dip coating, when the substrate is in contact
with a atmosphere that has a relative humidity
below 100 . - - In a multiple step process, after
calcinations of the first layer, the complete
cycle of dipping, drying and calcination is
repeated.
56(No Transcript)
57- 7- Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)
- - Chemical vapor deposition is a technique
which modifies the properties of membrane
surfaces by depositing a layer of the same or a
different compound through chemical reactions in
a gaseous medium surrounding the component at an
elevated temperature. - - CVD system which includes a system of
metering a mixture of reactive and carrier gases,
a heated reaction chamber, and a system for the
treatment and disposal of exhaust gases. - - The gas mixture (which typically consists of
hydrogen, nitrogen or argon, and reactive gases
such as metal halides and hydrocarbons) is
carried into a reaction chamber that is heated to
the desired temperature. - - The deposition of coatings by CVD can be
achieved in a number of ways such as thermal
decomposition, oxidation and hydrolysis
58(No Transcript)
59Industrial Ceramic Membranes
- In According to the IUPAC definition
- Microporous membranes are referred to as those
with a pore diameter smaller than 2 nm - There are two main types of microporous
membranes used in gas separations, namely
crystalline zeolite membranes and XRD amorphous
membranes such as silica, carbon, etc. - The practically useful crystalline microporous
membranes have polycrystalline structures,
consisting of many crystallites packed together
without any crystallite (grain) boundary gap in
the ideal case.
60- 1- Zeolite Membranes
- - Zeolites are crystalline microporous
aluminosilicate materials with a regular three
dimensional pore structure, which is relatively
stable at high temperatures. - - They are currently used as catalysts or
catalyst supports for a number of high
temperature reactions. - - The unique properties of zeolite membranes
are - (1) their size and shape selective separation
behavior. - (2) their thermal and chemical stabilities, which
are also the general advantages of ceramic
membranes. -
- - Due to their molecular sieve function,
zeolite membranes can principally discriminate
the components of gaseous or liquid mixtures
dependent on their molecular size. - - In order to perform the molecular sieving
function, the membranes must have negligible
amounts of defects and pinholes of larger than 2
nm. -
61- 2- Silica Membranes
- - Microporous silica (SiO2) membranes are
prominent representatives of amorphous membranes. -
- - The first successful silica membranes for gas
permeation/separation with good quality and high
flux were prepared in 1989 using a sol-gel method
where SiO2 polymer sols were firstly prepared by
acid catalysed hydrolysis of tetraethoxysilane
(TEOS) in alcoholic solution. -
- - The acid catalyst reduces hydrolysis but
enhances polycondenstion rates during the sol
preparation process resulting in a polymeric sol
containing silica particles of fractal structure.
-
- - Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) is another
method used in preparation of microporous silica
membranes.
62- 3- Carbon Membranes
- - Carbon membranes are inexpensive, highly
selective due to their pores of molecular
dimensions. -
- - They are prepared basically by carbonizing
organic polymers as starting materials at high
temperatures under controlled conditions. It is
expected that carbonized materials are stable at
high temperatures and resist chemical attack. - -The challenge for carbon membranes is how to
increase the gas permeation rate. - One approach is to make the membranes on
mesoporous substrates. - For example, carbon membranes were prepared by
ultrasonic deposition of polyfurfuryl alcohol on
a porous inorganic support, followed by pyrolysis
at 473873 K to convert the polymer layer to
microporous carbon film. -
- Another approach is using asymmetric hollow fiber
membrane precursors.
63Summary and Conclusion
64- In general, a membrane can be described as a
permselective barrier or a fine sieve. - There are several fields on which membrane
technologies are used - Developed membrane separation industrial
technologies (microfiltration and
ultrafiltration, reverse osmosis , and
electrodialysis) - Developing industrial membrane separation
technologies (Gas separation and pervaporation) - To-be-developed membrane separation technologies
(Carrier facilitated transport , membrane
contactors, and piezodialysis membrane) - There are a lot of applications of gas separation
membranes ( natural gas separations,
dehydration, and H2 separation) - Membrane materials include metal membranes,
polymeric membranes, ceramic and zeolite
membranes , and mixed-matrix membrane.
65- Gas separation has become a major industrial
application of membrane technology only during
the past 20 years. Gas separation technology is
evolving and expanding rapidly further
substantial growth will be seen in the coming
years. - Ceramic membranes, a special class of microporous
membranes, are being used in ultrafiltration and
microfiltration applications for which solvent
resistance and thermal stability are required. - Ceramic membranes are usually composite ones
consisting of several layers of one or more
different ceramic materials. - There are two types of ceramic membranes suitable
for gas separations (1) dense and (2) porous,
especially microporous, membranes. - Dense ceramic membranes are made from crystalline
ceramic materials - Microporous ceramic membranes are mainly composed
of amorphous silica or zeolites
66- Dense metal membranes, particularly palladium
membranes, are being considered for the
separation of hydrogen from gas mixtures, and
supported liquid films are being developed for
carrier-facilitated transport processes. - On the industrial level There are two main types
of microporous membranes used in gas separations,
namely crystalline zeolite membranes and XRD
amorphous membranes such as silica, carbon, etc - Zeolite membrane synthesis is an important new
field for development of ceramic membrane, the
specifications that zeolite have makes it a
promising material for investigation. - Several researches are being held for the
manufacturing of ceramic membranes for gas
separation out of zeolite, and there are several
other medical and military applications that will
find its way to the market in the coming years
67