posted on 2020-01-17, 19:33authored byAydin Ozcan, Rocio Semino, Guillaume Maurin, A. Ozgur Yazaydin
Membrane-based
separation technologies offer a cost-effective alternative
to many energy-intensive gas separation processes, such as distillation.
Mixed matrix membranes (MMMs) composed of polymers and metal–organic
frameworks (MOFs) have attracted a great deal of attention for being
promising systems to manufacture durable and highly selective membranes
with high gas fluxes and high selectivities. Therefore, understanding
gas transport through these MMMs is of significant importance. There
has been longstanding speculation that the gas diffusion behavior
at the interface formed between the polymer matrix and MOF particles
would strongly affect the global performance of the MMMs due to the
potential presence of nonselective voids or other defects. To shed
more light on this paradigm, we have performed microsecond long concentration
gradient-driven molecular dynamics (CGD-MD) simulations that deliver
an unprecedented microscopic picture of the transport of H2 and CH4 as single components and as a mixture in all
regions of the PIM-1/ZIF-8 membrane, including the polymer/MOF interface.
The fluxes of the permeating gases are computed and the impact of
the polymer/MOF interface on the H2/CH4 permselectivity
of the composite membrane is clearly revealed. Specifically, we show
that the poor compatibility between PIM-1 and ZIF-8, which manifests
itself by the presence of nonselective void spaces at their interface,
results in a decrease of the H2/CH4 permselectivity
for the corresponding composite membrane as compared to the performances
simulated for PIM-1 and ZIF-8 individually. We demonstrate that CGD-MD
simulations based on an accurate atomistic description of the polymer/MOF
composite is a powerful tool for characterization and understanding
of gas transport and separation mechanisms in MMMs.