John Bruce Appleby
Air Products & Chemicals
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Journal of Membrane Science | 1995
Robert Quinn; John Bruce Appleby; Guido P. Pez
New facilitated transport membranes which selectively permeate carbon dioxide from hydrogen and methane have been prepared and examined under a variety of conditions. Membranes consist of melts of the salt hydrates tetramethylammonium fluoride tetrahydrate, [(CH3)4N]F·4H2O, or tetraethylammonium acetate tetrahydrate, [(C2H5)4N]CH3CO2·4H2O, immobilized in films of Celgard 3401®. Operating at 50°C, both membranes exhibited CO2 permeabilities which increased with decreasing feed partial pressure of CO2, characteristic of a facilitated transport membrane. Selectivities of CO2H2 and of CO2CH4 increased with decreasing feed pressure since H2 and CH4 permeances were independent of feed pressure. Selectivities of CO2H2 were disappointingly low due to permeation of H2 through the dense phase of Celgard®. With some difficulty, the microporous support was eliminated by construction of membranes consisting of liquid [(CH3)4N]F·4H2O on the surface of a film of poly (trimethylsilylpropyne). Selectivities of CO2H2 as high as 360 were then observed at low feed partial pressures of CO2. Modeling of membrane properties is consistent with permeation of CO2 by a facilitated transport mechanism with reasonable derived diffusivities for the chemically bound CO2 carrier species.
Separation Science and Technology | 2002
Robert Quinn; John Bruce Appleby; Guido P. Pez
The salt hydrate tetramethylammonium fluoride tetrahydrate, [(CH3)4N]F·4H2O, in the liquid state reversibly absorbs large quantities of hydrogen sulfide, for example 0.30 mol H2S per mole of salt at 50°C and 100 kPa. Gas absorption likely occurs by deprotonation of H2S to form bisulfide, HS− , and bifluoride, HF2 −. The equilibrium constant for the reaction of H2S with [(CH3)4N]F·4H2O is 1.4 × 10− 2 kPa− 1 at 50°C as determined from absorption/desorption data. The heat of H2S absorption was surprisingly low, −0.78 kcal mol− 1. A second salt hydrate, tetraethylammonium acetate tetrahydrate, [(C2H5)4N]CH3CO2·4H2O, also reversibly absorbs H2S but with a lower affinity. However, at higher pressures, its H2S capacity increases more than does that of [(CH3)4N]F·4H2O making it more suitable for use as a pressure swing absorbent. Absorption/desorption data are consistent with reaction of one mole of [(C2H5)4N]CH3CO2·4H2O for each mole of H2S and an equilibrium constant of 6.4 × 10− 4 kPa− 1 mol H2S per mole of salt. Membranes consisting of liquid [(CH3)4N]F·4H2O immobilized in a microporous support exhibit selective permeation of H2S from CH4 and CO2. Permeabilities of H2S increased with decreasing feed pressure, consistent with facilitated transport of H2S. The H2S/CH4 selectivities ranged from 140 to 34 and decreased with increasing feed pressure while H2S/CO2 selectivities were 8–6. The presence of H2S in the feed tends to suppress permeation of CO2, implying that both gases compete for the same carrier species.
Separation Science and Technology | 1990
Daniel Vincent Laciak; Robert Quinn; Guido P. Pez; John Bruce Appleby; Pushpinder Singh Puri
Abstract Experimental results are presented on membranes of novel composition which selectively permeate ammonia and carbon dioxide from mixtures containing hydrogen. The CO2-selective membrane, which consists of a thin liquid film of the salt hydrate tetramethylammonium fluoride tetrahydrate, exhibits a CO2 permeance of 4-1 × 10−5 cm3/cm2·s·cmHg with selectivity, α(CO2/H2), ranging from 360-30. The NH3-selective membrane, poly(vinylammonium thiocyanate), displays a high NH3 permeance, 5−20 × 10−5 cm3/cm2·s·cmHg, with α(NH3/N2) as high as 3600 and α(NH3/H2) as high as 6000. Such membranes, which retain H2 at pressure in the feed stream, may offer new opportunities in the design of separation processes.
Separation Science and Technology | 1995
Robert Quinn; John Bruce Appleby; P. M. Mathias; Guido P. Pez
Abstract It was recently reported that certain salt hydrate melts can function as pressure swing absorbents for acid gases. The utility of these salt hydrates derives from their large and reversible acid gas absorption capacities. Typical is the salt hydrate tetramethylammonium fluoride tetrahydrate which as a melt absorbs 0.30 mol CO2/mol salt at 50[ddot]C and 100 kPa CO2. It has now been discovered that the reactivity of some of these salt hydrate melts with CO2 and H2S exhibits an unusual and unexpected temperature dependence. When certain specific salt hydrate melts containing absorbed CO2 were cooled to temperatures which resulted in solidification, CO2 was spontaneously desorbed. For example, a sample of tetraethylammonium acetate tetrahydrate (TEAA) containing 0.15 mol CO2/mol salt at 50[ddot]C and 102 kPa desorbed 90% of its bound CO2 upon cooling to 26[ddot]C. Gas absorption and desorption are completely reversible, and the absorbent can be cycled by simply raising or lowering the temperature thr...
Archive | 1993
Robert Quinn; Daniel Vincent Laciak; John Bruce Appleby; Guido P. Pez
Archive | 1988
Robert Quinn; Guido P. Pez; John Bruce Appleby
Archive | 2004
David Ross Graham; Daniel Joseph Tempel; Bernard Allen Toseland; Philip Bruce Henderson; James Joseph Hart; John Bruce Appleby; Jeffrey Richard Brzozowski; Pushpinder Singh Puri
Archive | 1998
John Bruce Appleby; Francis Joseph Waller; Stephen Charles Webb
Archive | 2004
Larry David Bagzis; John Bruce Appleby; Guido Peter Pez; Alan Charles Cooper
Archive | 1992
Robert Quinn; Guido P. Pez; John Bruce Appleby