828 research outputs found
Recent advances in multi-layer composite polymeric membranes for CO2 separation: A review
AbstractThe development of multilayer composite membranes for CO2 separation has gained increasing attention due to the desire for energy efficient technologies. Multilayer composite membranes have many advantages, including the possibility to optimize membrane materials independently by layers according to their different functions and to reduce the overall transport resistance by using ultrathin selective layers, and less limitations on the material mechanical properties and processability. A comprehensive review is required to capture details of the progresses that have already been achieved in developing multilayer composite membranes with improved CO2 separation performance in the past 15–20 years. In this review, various composite membrane preparation methods were compared, advances in composite membranes for CO2/CH4 separation, CO2/N2 and CO2/H2 separation were summarized with detailed data, and challenges facing for the CO2 separation using composite membranes, such as aging, plasticization and long-term stability, were discussed. Finally the perspectives and future research directions for composite membranes were presented
Polymeric membranes for CO2 separation: effect of aging, humidity and facilitated transport
Polymeric membranes represent a promising technology for gas separation processes, thanks to low costs, reduced energy consumption and limited waste production. The present thesis aims at studying the transport properties of two membrane materials, suitable for CO2 purification applications. In the first part, a polyimide, Matrimid 5218, has been throughout investigated, with particular reference to the effect of thermal treatment, aging and the presence of water vapor in the gas transport process. Permeability measurements showed that thermal history affects relevantly the diffusion of gas molecules across the membrane, influencing also the stability of the separation performances. Subsequently, the effect of water on Matrimid transport properties has been characterized for a wide set of incondensable penetrants. A monotonous reduction of permeability took place at increasing the water concentration within the polymer matrix, affecting the investigated gaseous species to the same extent, despite the different thermodynamic and kinetic features. In this view, a novel empirical model, based on the Free Volume Theory, has been proposed to qualitatively describe the phenomenon. Moreover, according to the accurate representation of the experimental data, the suggested approach has been combined with a more rigorous thermodynamic tool (NELF Model), allowing an exhaustive description of water influence on the single parameters contributing to the gas permeation across the membrane. In the second part, the study has focused on the synthesis and characterization of facilitated transport membranes, able to achieving outstanding separation performances thanks to the chemical enhancement of CO2 permeability. In particular, the transport properties have been investigated for high pressure CO2 separation applications and specific solutions have been proposed to solve stability issues, frequently arising under such severe conditions. Finally, the effect of different process parameters have been investigated, aiming at the identification of the optimal conditions capable to maximize the separation performance
Solvent Regeneration by Thermopervaporation in Subsea Natural Gas Dehydration: An Experimental and Simulation Study
An in-house designed membrane process suitable for subsea natural gas dehydration was studied. The use of a membrane absorber together with a thermopervaporation (TPV) unit for solvent regeneration in a closed loop enables the effective and clean production of high-pressure natural gas close to the wellhead. This process avoids the continuous chemical injection for preventing hydrate formation in natural gas pipelines. The regeneration of the absorbent agent (triethylene glycol (TEG)) by TPV in the closed loop is highly energy-efficient, owing to the unlimited free cooling energy from the cold subsea water. In this work, the performance of membranes in TPV for TEG regeneration was evaluated experimentally for the first time. Morphological and permeation characterizations of an AF2400 thin-film composite membrane were carried out, and high separation factors outperforming the vapor–liquid equilibrium (VLE) were obtained for the solutions containing various water contents at feed temperatures ranging from 30 to 70 °C. The highest values of a separation factor (128,000) and a permeability (2380 (Barrer)) were obtained for the TEG solution containing 30 wt % water at 30 °C, while the highest water flux (468 (g/m2·h)) was reached at 70 °C. Moreover, the concentration polarization phenomenon induced by the temperature gradient was revealed in the membrane’s vicinity of the feed channel. A 3D computational fluid dynamics simulation was performed over the entire module to correct the driving force for a more precise assessment of the membrane permeance. The temperature and concentration profiles in the membrane module domains were explored, and a good agreement with experimental data was obtained.publishedVersio
Stability of Oscillating Gaseous Masses in Massive Brans-Dicke Gravity
This paper explores the instability of gaseous masses for the radial
oscillations in post-Newtonian correction of massive Brans-Dicke gravity. For
this purpose, we derive linearized perturbed equation of motion through
Lagrangian radial perturbation which leads to the condition of marginal
stability. We discuss radius of instability of different polytropic structures
in terms of the Schwarzschild radius. It is concluded that our results provide
a wide range of difference with those in general relativity and Brans-Dicke
gravity.Comment: 31 pages, 11 figures, to appear in IJMP
Development of membrane contactors using volatile amine-based absorbents for CO2 capture: amine permeation through the membrane
Non-porous membrane contactor offers the possibility to reduce the amine emissions if the membrane layer is specifically designed to act as a barrier for the amine transport. In the present paper, the amine permeation through an AF2400 self-standing membrane, previously identified as the best dense layer material, have been investigated to evaluate the amine-emission preventing capacity of the membrane for the first time. The transport properties of different amine-based aqueous solutions (monoethanolamine, 3-methylaminopropylamine and diethylethanolamine) through a 10µm-thick self-standing AF2400 membrane have been characterized through pervaporation experiments in a temperature range of a typical amine absorption step (25 – 60 ºC). Humid CO2 permeation tests were also carried out to simulate the real gas membrane absorption separation conditions. A limited decrease (up to 25%) of the CO2 permeability was observed from dry state to fully humidified conditions, suggesting that the membrane contactor can be operated with humid flue gas to prevent solvent dehydration. The amine fluxes were found at least two orders of magnitude lower compared with CO2, demonstrating the ability of the membrane to favor the transport of CO2 over the amines.acceptedVersion© 2017. This is the authors’ accepted and refereed manuscript to the article. LOCKED until 8.5.2019 due to copyright restrictions. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
Thin-film-composite hollow fiber membranes containing amino acid salts as mobile carriers for CO2 separation
In this work, defect-free thin-film-composite (TFC) hollow fiber membranes containing various amino acid salts as CO2 facilitated transport carriers were fabricated via dip-coating. Four different amino acid salts, i.e., potassium prolinate (ProK), potassium argininate (ArgK), potassium glycinate (GlyK) and potassium cysteinate (CysK), were selected and embedded within polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) matrix. TGA, FTIR, SEM and humid mixed gas permeation test were used for the evaluation. Experiments show that adding amino acid salts into the PVA matrix significantly increases the CO2 permeance with little influence on the CO2/N2 selectivity. ProK was found the most effective within the four investigated mobile carriers; The addition of 40% ProK into the PVA matrix nearly doubled the CO2 permeance (from 399 to 791 GPU). The PVA/amino acid salt membranes also exhibited good long-term stability, in which both CO2 permeance and CO2/N2 selectivity remained nearly unchanged in a 20-h test and after a two-week shutdown period.publishedVersion© 2019. Open Access, made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
The Operative management in Bariatric Acute abdomen (OBA) Survey: long-term complications of bariatric surgery and the emergency surgeon\u27s point of view.
Background: The number of bariatric procedures is increasing worldwide. No consensus or guidelines about the emergency management of long-term complications following bariatric surgery are currently available. The aim of this study is to investigate by a web survey how an emergency surgeon approaches this unique group of patients in an emergency medical scenario and to report their personal experience.
Method: An international web survey was sent to 197 emergency surgeons with the aim to collect data about emergency surgeons\u27 experience in the management of patients admitted in the emergency department for acute abdominal pain after bariatric surgery. The survey was conceived as a questionnaire composed by 26 (multiple choice and open) questions and approved by a steering committee.
Results: One hundred seventeen international emergency surgeons decided to join the project and answered to the web survey with a response rate of 59.39%.
Conclusions: The aim of this WSES web survey was to highlight the current management of patients previously submitted to bariatric surgical procedures by ES.Emergency surgeons must be mindful of postoperative bariatric surgery complications. CT scan with oral intestinal opacification may be useful in making a diagnosis if carefully interpreted by the radiologist and the surgeon.In case of inconclusive clinical and radiological findings, when symptoms fail to improve, surgical exploration for bariatric patients presenting acute abdominal pain, by laparoscopy if expertise is available, is mandatory in the first 12-24 h, to have good outcomes and decrease morbidity rate
Enhanced CO2/H2 separation by GO and PVA-GO embedded PVAm nanocomposite membranes
Membrane technology for CO2/H2 separation, especially when using CO2-selective membranes to keep H2 on the high-pressure retentate side, has been considered promising and energy-efficient for further H2 transport and utilization. This work prepared and optimized a CO2-selective membrane based on polyvinylamine (PVAm) with embedded graphene oxide (GO) and grafted GO for CO2/H2 separation. The facilitated transport effect of PVAm enhances CO2 transport, while the GO-based 2D nanosheets bring in a barrier effect to compensate for the high H2 diffusivity. The GO-modified surface with higher CO2 affinity also provides additional CO2 sorption sites. The membranes’ chemical structure, thermal stability, and morphology were characterized. The effects of GO and PVA-GO in the PVAm matrix and optimal loadings of GO or PVA-GO were investigated. Introducing GO into PVAm significantly increased CO2 permeance with a slight increase in CO2/H2 selectivity. While by adding 0.5 wt% PVA-GO, CO2/H2 selectivity significantly increased from 10 to 22. The selective layer thickness also greatly affects CO2/H2 separation. By increasing the coating layer thickness to approx. 11 μm, the CO2/H2 selectivity substantially increased. The separation performances of the studied membrane are far above the current CO2/H2 upper bound.publishedVersio
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