TY - JOUR
T1 - Gas Permeation Properties, Physical Aging and its Mitigation in High Free Volume Glassy Polymers
AU - Low, Ze-Xian
AU - Budd, Peter
AU - Mckeown, Neil B.
AU - Patterson, Darrell
N1 - Funding Information:
The work is supported by Programme Grant EP/M01486X/1 (SynFabFun) funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC). We are grateful to Dr. Mariolino Carta, Dr. Richard Malpass-Evans, Dr. Andrew Foster, Dr. Wayne Harrison, Dr. Rupesh Bhavsar, Dr. Sara Sorribas, Dr. Qilei Song, Dr. Bo Wang, Dr. Maria-Chiara Ferrari, Dr. Patricia Gorgojo, Dr. John Chew, Prof. Davide Mattia, and Marzieh Tamaddondar for their valuable discussions. We also gratefully acknowledge the permissions to reproduce the copyright material in this review.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/6/27
Y1 - 2018/6/27
N2 - © 2018 American Chemical Society. Hundreds of polymers have been evaluated as membrane materials for gas separations, but fewer than 10 have made it into current commercial applications, mainly due to the effects of physical aging and plasticization. Efforts to overcome these two problems are a significant focus in gas separation membrane research, in conjunction with improving membrane separation performance to surpass the Robeson upper bounds of selectivity versus permeability for commercially important gas pairs. While there has been extensive research, ranging from manipulating the chemistry of existing polymers (e.g., thermally rearranged or cross-linked polyimides) to synthesizing new polymers such as polymers of intrinsic microporosity (PIMs), there have been three major oversights that this review addresses: (1) the need to compare the approaches to achieving the best performance in order to identify their effectiveness in improving gas transport properties and in mitigating aging, (2) a common standardized aging protocol that allows rapid determination of the success (or not) of these approaches, and (3) standard techniques that can be used to characterize aging and plasticization across all studies to enable them to be robustly and equally compared. In this review, we also provide our perspectives on a few key aspects of research related to high free volume polymer membranes: (1) the importance of Robeson plots for membrane aging studies, (2) eliminating thermal history, (3) measurement and reporting of gas permeability and aging rate, (4) aging and storing conditions, and (5) promising approaches to mitigate aging.
AB - © 2018 American Chemical Society. Hundreds of polymers have been evaluated as membrane materials for gas separations, but fewer than 10 have made it into current commercial applications, mainly due to the effects of physical aging and plasticization. Efforts to overcome these two problems are a significant focus in gas separation membrane research, in conjunction with improving membrane separation performance to surpass the Robeson upper bounds of selectivity versus permeability for commercially important gas pairs. While there has been extensive research, ranging from manipulating the chemistry of existing polymers (e.g., thermally rearranged or cross-linked polyimides) to synthesizing new polymers such as polymers of intrinsic microporosity (PIMs), there have been three major oversights that this review addresses: (1) the need to compare the approaches to achieving the best performance in order to identify their effectiveness in improving gas transport properties and in mitigating aging, (2) a common standardized aging protocol that allows rapid determination of the success (or not) of these approaches, and (3) standard techniques that can be used to characterize aging and plasticization across all studies to enable them to be robustly and equally compared. In this review, we also provide our perspectives on a few key aspects of research related to high free volume polymer membranes: (1) the importance of Robeson plots for membrane aging studies, (2) eliminating thermal history, (3) measurement and reporting of gas permeability and aging rate, (4) aging and storing conditions, and (5) promising approaches to mitigate aging.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85049151730&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.mendeley.com/research/gas-permeation-properties-physical-aging-mitigation-high-free-volume-glassy-polymers
U2 - 10.1021/acs.chemrev.7b00629
DO - 10.1021/acs.chemrev.7b00629
M3 - Review article
SN - 0009-2665
VL - 118
SP - 5871
EP - 5911
JO - Chemical Reviews
JF - Chemical Reviews
IS - 12
ER -