Low-temperature ozone treatment for p-xylene perm-selective MFI type zeolite membranes: Unprecedented revelation of performance-negating cracks larger than 10 nm in polycrystalline membrane structures

Authors
Park, SanhaLee, MinseongHong, SungwonJeong, YanghwanKim, DongjaeChoi, NakwonNam, JaewookBaik, HionsuckChoi, Jungkyu
Issue Date
2023-02
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Journal of Membrane Science, v.668
Abstract
We report that low-temperature ozone calcination allowed MFI type polycrystalline zeolite membranes to maximize theirp-/o-xylene separation factor (as high as ca. 2000) by suppressing defect formation. Conventional high-temperature calcination and rapid thermal processing, which provide poor and marked p-/o-xylene sepa-ration abilities, respectively, were used for comparison. The corresponding defect structures were quantitatively analyzed by image processing of fluorescence confocal optical microscopy images combined with membrane permeation modeling, revealing the main defects (grain boundary defects and cracks) and their tortuosity, porosity, and size. To the best of our knowledge, we, for the first time, demonstrated that in contrast to common belief, the minor portion of wider cracks instead of the major portion of narrower grain boundary defects determined the final permeation rates. Specifically, the MFI membrane prepared by high-temperature calcination contained many grain boundary defects (narrow; ca. 1 nm) and few cracks (wide; ca. 20 nm) that accounted for ca. 0.1% and 99.8%, respectively, of the slowly permeating o-xylene molar flux. In contrast, the ozone-treated MFI membranes, which only possessed grain boundary defects, achieved the high p-/o-xylene separation per-formance, underlining the need for the selective reduction in the number of wider cracks rather than ubiquitous, narrow grain boundary defects.
Keywords
MICROSTRUCTURAL OPTIMIZATION; TEMPLATE-REMOVAL; GAS PERMEATION; SEPARATION; DIFFUSION; CO2; HYDROCARBONS; TRANSPORT; DEFECTS; ISOMERS; Zeolite membranes; Grain boundary defect; Crack; Fluorescence confocal optical microscopy; (FCOM); Xylene isomer separation
ISSN
0376-7388
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/113996
DOI
10.1016/j.memsci.2022.121212
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2023
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