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Unprecedentedly Low CO<sub>2</sub> Transport through Vertically Aligned, Conical Silicon Nanotube Membranes

12

Citations

39

References

2020

Year

Abstract

Nanotube membranes could show significantly enhanced permeance and selectivity for gas separations. Up until now, studies have primarily focused on applying carbon nanotubes to membranes to achieve ultrafast mass transport. Here, we report the first preparation of silicon nanotube (SiNT) membranes via a template-assisted method and investigate the gas transport behavior through these SiNT membranes using single- and mixed-gas permeation experiments. The SiNT membranes consist of conical cylinder-shaped nanotubes vertically aligned on a porous silicon wafer substrate. The diameter of the SiNT pore mouths are 10 and 30 nm, and the average inner diameter of the tube body is 80 nm. Interestingly, among the gases tested, we found an unprecedentedly low CO<sub>2</sub> permeance through the SiNT membranes in single-gas permeation experiments, exceeding the theoretical Knudsen selectivity toward small gases/CO<sub>2</sub> separation. This behavior was caused by the reduction of CO<sub>2</sub> permeability through the blocking effect of CO<sub>2</sub> adsorbed in the narrow pore channels of the SiNT cone regions, indicating that CO<sub>2</sub> molecules have a high affinity to the native silicon oxide layer (∼2 nm) that is formed on the inner walls of SiNTs. SiNT membranes also exhibited enhanced gas permeance and water flux as compared to classic theoretical models and, as such, may prove useful as a new type of nanotube material for use in membrane applications.

References

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