Advanced
Polymer Membranes for the Purification of Hydrogen and Other
Gases
Description
Current methods
for carbon dioxide removal and hydrogen purification are not
only very expensive but also cause large losses of gas and
use toxic chemicals. The hydrogen required in the refining
business is generated through costly, toxic, and inefficient
systems like steam methane reforming and pressure swing adsorption.
Furthermore, most polymer membranes used for membrane purification
systems are more permeable to small molecules (e.g., hydrogen)
than to larger molecules (e.g., carbon dioxide). Less permeability
requires costly repressurization of the valuable small molecule
streams (hydrogen).
This invention
incorporates nanotechnology to form an advanced rubbery polymer
membrane. Dr. Freeman's membrane has a huge increase in permeability
with little or no loss of selectivity. Increases in permeability
are on the order of 10x to 100x greater than commercially
available membranes such as Matrimid and Ultem. These membranes
can be tailored for permeability and selectivity by using
different membrane polymer matrices, making them versatile
enough to filter and purify a wide range of gases.
Benefits
- Increases permeability
- Little to no loss in selectivity
- Reduces driving force (power) and membrane area required
to achieve a desired gas flux
- Non-toxic method
- More efficient, simple, and compact than current hydrogen
or methane purification techniques
- Less costly than current hydrogen and methane purification
techniques
- Improves mechanical properties of the membrane
Features
- Selectively removes acid or polar gases (e.g. CO2, H2S)
from mixtures with light gases (H2, N2, CH4)
- High acid gas permeability
- High selectivity of acid gases over nonpolar gases
- Purified hydrogen gas (or other light gas) remains pressurized
- Highly selective for CO2 and H2S
- Can be customized for specific permeability and selectivity
of desired gases
- 10x to 100x greater permeability
Market Potential/Applications
Current annual hydrogen production stands
at approximately 9 million tons in the United States, with
worldwide consumption at 50 million tons and growing at 10%
per year. Based on these numbers, even small increases in
the efficiency of hydrogen production could lead to enormous
savings. With a growing emphasis on the U.S. hydrogen economy,
a less costly source of pure hydrogen will be required to
power the next generation fuel cell vehicles. Moreover, this
technology can be applied in the purification of other gases,
including the removal of CO2 and H2S from natural gas. Dr.
Freeman's technology can also be applied in the dehydration
of compressed air and natural gas as well as purification
of nitrogen.
For further information please contact:
University of Texas,
Austin, USA
Website : www.otc.utexas.edu

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