Abstract

Sol–gel derived microporous amorphous TiO2–ZrO2–organic composite membranes were prepared by two different types of chelating ligands, diethanolamine (DEA) and isoeugenol (2-methoxy-4-propenylphenol, ISOH) as reaction inhibitors for hydrolysis and condensation of Ti- and Zr-alkoxide. The structural properties of the composite gels were characterized via a thermogravimetric study (TG), X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), and N2 adsorption analysis; and the optimized calcination atmosphere and temperature conditions for a microporous membrane were examined. A crack-free thin (50nm) TiO2–ZrO2–organic layer for gas separation was formed on a SiO2–ZrO2 intermediate layer (150nm) supported on a macroporous α-Al2O3 substrate as an asymmetric membrane. Compared with DEA, more of the ISOH and its remnants effectively remained after calcination, which promoted higher permeance and selectivity as a microporous gas separation membrane by forming bimodal microporous structures that narrowed the original TiO2–ZrO2 pores. A TiO2–ZrO2 membrane with ISOH calcined at 350°C under a N2 atmosphere showed He and CO2 permeances of 1.0×10−6 and 2.0×10−7molm−2s−1Pa−1, respectively, at 200°C. The CO2/N2 permeance ratio was 6.4 at 200°C and 46 at 35°C.

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