Plasma-treated polymer of intrinsic microporosity membranes for enhanced CO2/CH4 separation

Tong Huang, Qiuyu Wu, Dong Qi, Feifan Yang, Yaqiong Xie, Guangru Zhang, Xin Liu, Gongping Liu, Haipeng Zhu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Natural gas upgrading demands advanced CO2/CH4 separation membranes for CO2 removal. Polymer of intrinsic microporosity (PIM-1) represents a novel polymeric molecular sieve featuring exceptional permeability and processability, but its moderate CO2/CH4 selectivity remains challenging. Plasma treatment, a well-applied technique for surface modification of dense polymers, has been adopted to PIM with abundant interchain micropores for the first time. The physical alteration of plasma treatment in He gas atmosphere, primarily the chain scission, has significant impacts on CO2/CH4 separation performance of PIM-1 membrane, by means of regulating its hierarchical microporous structure. Wide angle X ray scattering (WAXS) results suggest that the relatively large micropores are more prone to shrinkage and collapse than relatively small ones, which effectively enhances the selectivity. Moreover, owing to near-surface localization effect, the plasma modification is constrained within a skin layer onto a bulk intact layer. This asymmetric membrane structure allows the balance of enhancing CO2/CH4 selectivity and sustaining high CO2 permeability. By optimizing plasma input power and duration, the selectivity of plasma-treated PIM-1 membrane increased by 1.65 times, with a high permeability of over 4000 Barrer. After 2-month aging, the permeability was still maintained 60 % of its initial value. This suggests plasma treatment as a promising post-modification method for PIM CO2/CH4 separation membranes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number134025
JournalSeparation and Purification Technology
Volume376
DOIs
StatePublished - 17 Dec 2025

Keywords

  • CO/CH gas separation
  • Membrane
  • Plasma treatment
  • Polymer of intrinsic microporosity (PIM)

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