Gas-sieving zeolitic membranes fabricated by condensation of precursor nanosheets

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Abstract

The synthesis of molecular-sieving zeolitic membranes by the assembly of building blocks, avoiding the hydrothermal treatment, is highly desired to improve reproducibility and scalability. Here we report exfoliation of the sodalite precursor RUB-15 into crystalline 0.8-nm-thick nanosheets, that host hydrogen-sieving six-membered rings (6-MRs) of SiO4 tetrahedra. Thin films, fabricated by the filtration of a suspension of exfoliated nanosheets, possess two transport pathways: 6-MR apertures and intersheet gaps. The latter were found to dominate the gas transport and yielded a molecular cutoff of 3.6 Å with a H2/N2 selectivity above 20. The gaps were successfully removed by the condensation of the terminal silanol groups of RUB-15 to yield H2/CO2 selectivities up to 100. The high selectivity was exclusively from the transport across 6-MR, which was confirmed by a good agreement between the experimentally determined apparent activation energy of H2 and that computed by ab initio calculations. The scalable fabrication and the attractive sieving performance at 250–300 °C make these membranes promising for precombustion carbon capture.

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Dakhchoune, M., Villalobos, L. F., Semino, R., Liu, L., Rezaei, M., Schouwink, P., … Agrawal, K. V. (2021). Gas-sieving zeolitic membranes fabricated by condensation of precursor nanosheets. Nature Materials, 20(3), 362–369. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41563-020-00822-2

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