Inorganic Pillar Center-Facilitated Counterdiffusion Synthesis for Highly H2 Perm-Selective KAUST-7 Membranes

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2022 Jan 26;14(3):4297-4306. doi: 10.1021/acsami.1c21077. Epub 2022 Jan 11.

Abstract

Fluorinated metal-organic framework materials (NbOFFIVE-1-Ni, also referred to as KAUST-7) have attracted widespread attention because of their high chemical stability and thermal stability, outstanding tolerance with water and H2S, and high CO2-adsorption selectivity over H2 and CH4. KAUST-7 was expected to be a new membrane material candidate for H2/CO2 separation because of the hindered permeation of CO2 resulting from the interaction between CO2 and (NbOF5)2- of the KAUST-7 framework. A highly H2 perm-selective KAUST-7 membrane was first achieved using a novel strategy of inorganic pillar center-facilitated counterdiffusion (IPCFCD) proposed by us. The IPCFCD method not only effectively avoided the corrosion of hydrofluoric acid to α-Al2O3 tubes in the process of preparing KAUST-7 membranes, but also better reduced grain boundary defects because of the faster nucleation rate and resultant high crystallinity. The KAUST-7 membrane exhibited a high H2/CO2 separation factor (SF) of 27.30 for the 1:1 H2/CO2 binary gas mixture with a high H2 permeance of 5.30 × 10-7 mol m-2 s-1 Pa-1 under ambient conditions and a slight decrease of the H2/CO2 SF with increasing operation temperature and presence of steam. This study highlighted the importance of pre-synthesizing inorganic pillar centers (NiNbOF5 intermediate) and the innovation of a membrane formation process for synthesizing polycrystalline KAUST-7 membranes. Most important of all, our study provided a novel approach to overcome the challenge in fabricating metal-organic framework membranes containing corrosive reactants for the corresponding supports.

Keywords: KAUST-7 membrane; counterdiffusion; gas separation; inorganic pillar centers; metal−organic frameworks.