Plasticization-Resistant Carboxyl-Functionalized 6FDA-Polyimide of Intrinsic Microporosity (PIM-PI) for Membrane-Based Gas Separation

89Citations
Citations of this article
59Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

A novel trimethyl-substituted carboxyl-containing polyimide was synthesized via a one-pot high-temperature polycondensation reaction of 4,4′-(hexafluoroisopropylidene)diphthalic anhydride (6FDA) and 3,5-diamino-2,4,6-trimethylbenzoic acid (TrMCA). The polyimide (6FDA-TrMCA) displayed a Brunauer-Emmett-Teller surface area of 260 m2 g-1, demonstrating intrinsic microporosity, in contrast to the related low-free volume COOH-functionalized polyimide 6FDA-DABA. Compared to the nonfunctionalized 6FDA polyimide analogue made from 2,4,6-trimethyl-m-phenylenediamine (TrMPD) - also known as 6FDA-DAM - carboxyl functionalization in 6FDA-TrMCA resulted in reduced surface area, lower fractional free volume, and tighter average chain spacing. Gas permeabilities of 6FDA-TrMCA were typical of functionalized polyimides of intrinsic microporosity (PIM-PIs). For example, at 2 atm and 35 °C, 6FDA-TrMCA showed pure-gas H2 and CO2 permeability of 193 and 144 barrer, coupled with H2/CH4 and CO2/CH4 selectivity of 61 and 45, respectively. Notably, in mixed-gas permeation tests with an equimolar CO2-CH4 mixture at a CO2 partial pressure of 12 atm, 6FDA-TrMCA demonstrated performance located on the 2018 mixed-gas upper bound with a CO2 permeability of ∼98 barrer and CO2/CH4 permselectivity of 38. As the first reported COOH-functionalized PIM-PI homopolymer, 6FDA-TrMCA revealed excellent resistance against CO2-induced plasticization at least up to a CO2 partial pressure of 15 atm, covering the range of typical wellhead CO2 partial pressures (5-10 atm).

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Abdulhamid, M. A., Genduso, G., Wang, Y., Ma, X., & Pinnau, I. (2020). Plasticization-Resistant Carboxyl-Functionalized 6FDA-Polyimide of Intrinsic Microporosity (PIM-PI) for Membrane-Based Gas Separation. Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research, 59(12), 5247–5256. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.iecr.9b04994

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free