Abstract

Abstract Two intrinsically microporous polyimides were obtained by high-temperature, one-pot polycondensation reaction of novel triptycene-based dianhydrides containing dimethyl- or diisopropyl-bridgehead groups with a commercially available highly sterically hindered 3,3ʹ-dimethylnaphthidine (DMN) diamine monomer. The dimethyl bridgehead groups in the triptycene building block provided the DMN-based polyimide (TDA1-DMN) with larger surface area (760 m 2 g -1 ) than the diisopropyl-based polyimide (TDA i 3-DMN) (680 m 2 g -1 ), greater fraction of ultramicroporosity, as observed from N 2 and CO 2 NLDFT adsorption analysis, and higher gas permeability and selectivity. Wide-angle X-ray diffraction (WAXD) measurements demonstrated that TDA1-DMN and TDA i 3-DMN exhibited a bimodal pore size distribution, where TDA1-DMN showed smaller d-spacing values and broader intensity peaks. Both TDA-DMN-based polyimides showed very high gas permeabilities with moderate selectivities. For example, fresh TDA1-DMN exhibited an O 2 permeability of 783 Barrer coupled with an O 2 /N 2 selectivity of 4.3 and H 2 permeability of 3050 Barrer with H 2 /N 2 selectivity of 16.7, values that surpassed the 2008 Robeson permeability/selectivity upper bounds. Physical aging of the TDA-DMN polyimide films over a period of 250 days showed relatively small changes in permeability (∼20%) and selectivity (∼5%).

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