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Synthesis and Characterization of Novel Polybenzimidazoles and Post-modifications for Membrane Separation Applications

Polybenzimidazoles, a class of aromatic heterocyclic polymers, are well known due to their remarkable thermal stability, mechanical properties and chemical resistance which are often required in extreme operation conditions. Because of these properties, polybenzimidazoles are excellent candidates in various application areas including proton exchange membrane fuel cells, gas separation membranes, reverse osmosis and nanofiltration, and high performance coatings. The following studies are focused on the synthesis, characterization and related properties of polybenzimidazoles and polybenzimidazole based materials.

A novel sulfonyl-containing tetraamino-substituted monomer (3,3',4,4'-tetraaminodiphenylsulfone) was synthesized and polymerized with three different diacid monomers to make polybenzimidazoles. The new monomer synthesis route with reduced steps relative to the existing literature method increased the overall yield by a factor of three. The sulfonyl-containing polybenzimidazoles have enhanced solubilities in common organic solvents including dimthylsulfoxide, dimethylacetamide and N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone in comparison with the commercial polybenzimidazole, Celazole®, poly(2,2'-(m-phenylene)-5,5'-bibenzimidazole). The improvements in solubility are attributed to the introduction of polar sulfonyl linking moiety in the monomer. Remarkable thermal stabilities (high T<sub>g</sub>, > 428 °C) were demonstrated through Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (DMA) and Thermogravimetric Analysis (TGA). A well designed film casting process was investigated and established. Polybenzimidazoles were fabricated into transparent thin films (20-30 μm thick) for gas transport measurements. These novel polybenzimidazole films exhibited extraordinary gas separation properties, especially for H₂/CO₂ separation.

There is a trade-off relationship between gas permeability and selectivity through dense, non-porous polymer membranes that was discovered by Robeson in 1991. The ultimate goal for developing gas separation membranes is to improve both permeability and selectivity simultaneously. Gas permeability is related to the free volume between polymer chains. In order to improve gas permeability, we hypothesized a concept that increasing free volume could be achieved by thermally degrading sacrificial components and volatilizing their byproducts from a glassy matrix. Volatile components were introduced into the films to preoccupy the spaces between polymer chains. Once they were degraded and removed through the thermal treatment, it was hypothesized that the preoccupied spaces would remain empty due to the glassy nature of the matrix at the heat treatment temperature, thus resulting in more free volume. Two post- modification strategies including grafting and blending were utilized to incorporate the volatile components, poly(propylene oxide) and poly(ethylene oxide). Post-modified polybenzimidazole films impressively showed significant enhancements in both gas permeability and selectivity for H₂/CO₂ separation. The H₂ permeability of the post-modified TADPS-OBA polybenzimidazole increased from 3.1-6.2 Barrers to 5.2-7.5 Barrers (up to 66% increase). The selectivity for H₂/CO₂ increased from 7.5-10.5 to 10.1-13.0 (up to 33% increase). The study on the potential effects of water vapor on the separation performance of PBI membranes was discussed in the appendix. / Ph. D.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/96200
Date29 June 2018
CreatorsLiu, Ran
ContributorsChemistry, Riffle, Judy S., Lesko, John J., Liu, Guoliang, Turner, S. Richard, Davis, Richey M.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/x-zip-compressed
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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