Separation and Purification Technology, Vol.194, 222-230, 2018
Surface modification to produce superhydrophobic hollow fiber membrane contactor to avoid membrane wetting for biogas purification under pressurized conditions
This article investigates CO2 removal from biogas (containing 40% CO2 and 60% CH4) using a hollow fiber membrane contactor (HFMC) with K2CO3 aqueous solutions as absorbent at elevated pressures up to 10 bar. Superhydrophobic PTFE membrane fibers (with a water contact angle of 158.4 degrees and sliding angle of 1.3 degrees) were fabricated by spraying silica nanoparticles on membrane surface and then used in membrane module for absorption experiments. The modified membrane outperformed the original membrane at elevated absorption pressures, and the highest CO2 removal efficiency and absorption flux reached 97.1% and 1.85 x 10(-3) mol m(-2) s(-1), respectively. A 2D axisymmetric non-wetted mathematic model was developed to determine the membrane wetness conditions during absorption experiments. The model validation results indicated that when using aqueous K2CO3 solutions as absorbent the modified superhydrophobic membrane used in this study was able to prevent membrane wetting even at pressurized conditions up to 10 bar. This work showed that the superhydrophobic membranes modified by spray-deposition technique have great potential for application in HFMC to avoid membrane wetting for biogas purification under pressurized conditions.
Keywords:Superhydrophobic;Hollow fiber membrane contactor;Surface modification;Biogas purification;Membrane wetting