Tertiary-Amine-Functional Poly(arylene ether)s for Acid-Gas Separations
Abstract
Competitive sorption enables the emergent phenomenon of enhanced CO2-based selectivities for gas separation membranes when using microporous polymers with primary amines. However, strong secondary forces in these polymers through hydrogen bonding results in low solvent solubility, precluding standard solution processing approaches to form these polymers into membrane films. Herein, we circumvent these manufacturing constraints while maintaining competitive-sorption enhancements by synthesizing eight representative microporous poly(arylene ether)s (PAEs) with tertiary amines. High-pressure H2S, CO2, and CH4 sorption isotherms were collected for these samples to demonstrate enhanced affinity for acid gases relative to the unfunctional control polymer. Although competitive sorption was observed for all samples, improvements were less pronounced than for primary-amine-functional analogs. For H2S-based separations, the benefits of competitive sorption offset decreases in selectivity due to plasticization. This detailed study helps to elucidate the role of tertiary amines for acid gas separations in solution-processable microporous PAEs.
This work was supported by the Department of Navy, Office of Naval Research under ONR awards N00014-20-1-2418 and N00014-21-1-2666 for support in the development and testing of novel microporous polymers and for support in elucidating the role of competitive sorption in membrane materials. Additionally, we are grateful to Eni S.p.A. through the MIT Energy Initiative for support in polymer development for H2S-based separations. P.A.D. acknowledges support from an NSF-GRFP fellowship (DGE-2141064). T.M.S. is grateful for support from the National Science Foundation DMR-2207299. This study made use of the shared facilities available at MIT, including the Materials Research Laboratory and the Department of Chemistry Instrumentation Facility.