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Separating methane and CO2 will become more efficient

10.18.17 | KU Leuven

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To make natural gas and biogas suitable for use, the methane has to be separated from the CO 2 . This involves the use of membranes: filters that stop the methane and let the CO 2 pass through. Researchers at KU Leuven (University of Leuven), Belgium, have developed a new membrane that makes the separation process much more effective.

When it comes to extracting natural gas or producing biogas, it's all about the methane. But methane is never found in its pure form. Natural gas, for instance, always contains quite a bit of carbon dioxide (the greenhouse gas CO 2 ), sometimes up to 50 percent. To purify the methane - or, in other words, remove the CO 2 - the industry often uses membranes. These membranes function as molecular sieves that separate the methane and the CO 2 . The methane can then be used as a source of energy for heating, for the production of chemicals, or as fuel, while the CO 2 can be reused as a building block for renewable fuels and chemicals.

Existing membranes still need to be improved for effective CO 2 separations, says Professor Ivo Vankelecom from the KU Leuven Faculty of Bioscience Engineering. "An effective membrane only allows the CO 2 to pass through, and as much of it as possible. The commercially available membranes come with a trade-off between selectivity and permeability: they are either highly selective or highly permeable. Another important problem is the fact that the membranes plasticise if the gas mixture contains too much CO 2 . This makes them less efficient: almost everything can pass through them, so that the separation of methane and CO 2 fails."

The best available membranes consist of a polymeric matrix with a filler in it, for instance a metal-organic framework (MOF). This MOF filler has nanoscale pores. The new study has shown that the characteristics of such a membrane improve significantly with a heat treatment above 160 degrees Celsius during the production process. "You get more crosslinks in the polymeric matrix: the net densifies, so to speak, and that in itself already improves the membrane performance, because it can no longer plasticise. At these temperatures, the structure of the MOF - the filler - changes, and it becomes more selective. Finally, the high-temperature treatment also improves polymer-filler adhesion: the gas mixture can no longer escape through little holes at the filler-polymer interface."

This gives the new membrane the highest selectivity ever reported, while preventing plasticisation when the concentration of CO 2 is high. "If you start off with a 50/50 CO 2 /methane mixture, this membrane gives you 164 times more CO 2 than methane after permeation through the membrane," Dr Lik Hong Wee explains. "These are the best results ever reported in scientific literature."

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This study is a collaboration between KU Leuven (Professor Ivo Vankelecom and Dr Lik Hong Wee from the Faculty of Bioscience Engineering / Centre for Surface Chemistry and Catalysis) and UAntwerp (EMAT unit led by Professor Sara Bals).

Project website: http://www.biw.kuleuven.be/m2s/cok/Groups/membrane-technology

Dr Lik Hong Wee
likhong.wee@kuleuven.be

Energy & Environmental Science

10.1039/C7EE01872J

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Professor Ivo Vankelecom
ivo.vankelecom@kuleuven.be

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
KU Leuven. (2017, October 18). Separating methane and CO2 will become more efficient. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LM2WW45L/separating-methane-and-co2-will-become-more-efficient.html
MLA:
"Separating methane and CO2 will become more efficient." Brightsurf News, Oct. 18 2017, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LM2WW45L/separating-methane-and-co2-will-become-more-efficient.html.