Lego-like assembly of zeolitic membranes improves carbon capture

iStock photos (credit: ANNEYP)

iStock photos (credit: ANNEYP)

EPFL chemical engineers have developed a new way to manufacture zeolitic membranes, state-of-the-art materials used for gas separation in harsh conditions.

Zeolites are porous minerals that occur both naturally but also are being synthesized artificially. Because they are stable and durable, zeolites are used for chemical catalysis, purification of gases and liquids, and even in medical applications such as drug delivery and blood-clotting powders, e.g. the QuickClot trauma bandages used in the US military.

Zeolites used in gas separation are usually produced as membranes. The state-of-the-art zeolitic membranes are manufactured by a lengthy and complex crystallization process. Unfortunately, this method has proved difficult to reproduce. Also, it lacks in producing efficient gas-separation membranes, especially when it comes to the separation of hydrogen and carbon dioxide, which is necessary for pre-combustion carbon capture from power plants.

A team of chemical engineers led by Kumar Agrawal at EPFL Valais Wallis have now successfully simplified the chemistry behind zeolite membrane synthesis, making it simple, reproducible, and scalable. The achievement of the longstanding goal is published in Nature Materials.

The scientists developed a new material chemistry that eliminates the lengthy crystallization process altogether. “We build Lego-like crystals – nanosheets – and bonded them on top of each other using silanol condensation chemistry,” says Agrawal. The resulting membrane shows ideal hydrogen-carbon dioxide separation performance, with selectivity up to 100 at 250-300 degrees Celsius.

The authors conclude: “The scalable synthesis of high-temperature hydrogen-sieving zeolitic membranes is expected to improve the energy-efficiency of pre-combustion carbon capture.”

Other contributors

  • University of Montpellier
  • King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)
  • ETH Zurich
Funding

Swiss Competence Center for Energy Research: Efficiency of Industrial Processes (SCCER-EIP)

Swiss National Science Foundation

Swiss National Supercomputing Centre (CSCS)

References

Mostapha Dakhchoune, Luis Francisco Villalobos, Rocio Semino, Lingmei Liu, Mojtaba Rezaei, Pascal Schouwink, Claudia Esther Avalos, Paul Baade, Vanessa Wood, Yu Han, Michele Ceriotti, Kumar, Varoon Agrawal. Gas sieving zeolitic membranes by the condensation of precursor nanosheets. Nature Materials 05 October 2020. DOI: 10.1038/s41563-020-00822-2