Benedetti, Francesco Maria
  
(2019)
Development and Detailed Characterization of Innovative, High-Performance Membrane Materials for CO2 Capture Processes, [Dissertation thesis], Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna. 
 Dottorato di ricerca in 
Ingegneria civile, chimica, ambientale e dei materiali, 31 Ciclo. DOI 10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/9067.
  
 
  
  
        
        
        
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
    
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      Abstract
      The scope of this dissertation is to study the transport phenomena of small molecules in polymers and membranes for gas separation applications, with particular attention to energy efficiency and environmental sustainability. This work seeks to contribute to the development of new competitive selective materials through the characterization of novel organic polymers such as CANALs and ROMPs, as well as through the combination of selective materials obtaining mixed matrix membranes (MMMs), to make membrane technologies competitive with the traditional ones. Kinetic and thermodynamic aspects of the transport properties were investigated in ideal and non-ideal scenarios, such as mixed-gas experiments. The information we gathered contributed to the development of the fundamental understanding related to phenomenon like CO2-induced plasticization and physical aging.
Among the most significant results, ZIF-8/PPO MMMs provided materials whose permeability and selectivity were higher than those of the pure materials for He/CO2 separation. The CANALs featured norbornyl benzocyclobutene backbone and thereby introduced a third typology of ladder polymers in the gas separation field, expanding the structural diversity of microporous materials. CANALs 
have a completely hydrocarbon-based and non-polar rigid backbone, which makes them an ideal model system to investigate structure-property correlations. ROMPs were synthesized by means of the ring opening metathesis living polymerization, which allowed the formation of bottlebrush polymers. CF3-ROMP reveled to be ultrapermeable to CO2, with unprecedented plasticization resistance properties. Mixed-gas experiments in glassy polymer showed that solubility-selectivity controls the separation efficiency of materials in multicomponent conditions. Finally, it was determined that plasticization pressure in not an intrinsic property of a material and does not represent a state of the system, but rather comes from the contribution of solubility coefficient and diffusivity coefficient in the framework of the solution-diffusion model.
     
    
      Abstract
      The scope of this dissertation is to study the transport phenomena of small molecules in polymers and membranes for gas separation applications, with particular attention to energy efficiency and environmental sustainability. This work seeks to contribute to the development of new competitive selective materials through the characterization of novel organic polymers such as CANALs and ROMPs, as well as through the combination of selective materials obtaining mixed matrix membranes (MMMs), to make membrane technologies competitive with the traditional ones. Kinetic and thermodynamic aspects of the transport properties were investigated in ideal and non-ideal scenarios, such as mixed-gas experiments. The information we gathered contributed to the development of the fundamental understanding related to phenomenon like CO2-induced plasticization and physical aging.
Among the most significant results, ZIF-8/PPO MMMs provided materials whose permeability and selectivity were higher than those of the pure materials for He/CO2 separation. The CANALs featured norbornyl benzocyclobutene backbone and thereby introduced a third typology of ladder polymers in the gas separation field, expanding the structural diversity of microporous materials. CANALs 
have a completely hydrocarbon-based and non-polar rigid backbone, which makes them an ideal model system to investigate structure-property correlations. ROMPs were synthesized by means of the ring opening metathesis living polymerization, which allowed the formation of bottlebrush polymers. CF3-ROMP reveled to be ultrapermeable to CO2, with unprecedented plasticization resistance properties. Mixed-gas experiments in glassy polymer showed that solubility-selectivity controls the separation efficiency of materials in multicomponent conditions. Finally, it was determined that plasticization pressure in not an intrinsic property of a material and does not represent a state of the system, but rather comes from the contribution of solubility coefficient and diffusivity coefficient in the framework of the solution-diffusion model.
     
  
  
    
    
      Tipologia del documento
      Tesi di dottorato
      
      
      
      
        
      
        
          Autore
          Benedetti, Francesco Maria
          
        
      
        
          Supervisore
          
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Dottorato di ricerca
          
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Ciclo
          31
          
        
      
        
          Coordinatore
          
          
        
      
        
          Settore disciplinare
          
          
        
      
        
          Settore concorsuale
          
          
        
      
        
          Parole chiave
          Gas Separation, Membrane Technology, Carbon Capture, Energy Efficiency, CANALs, ROMPs, Mixed-Gas Sorption, Plasticization, Physical Aging
          
        
      
        
          URN:NBN
          
          
        
      
        
          DOI
          10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/9067
          
        
      
        
          Data di discussione
          12 Aprile 2019
          
        
      
      URI
      
      
     
   
  
    Altri metadati
    
      Tipologia del documento
      Tesi di dottorato
      
      
      
      
        
      
        
          Autore
          Benedetti, Francesco Maria
          
        
      
        
          Supervisore
          
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Dottorato di ricerca
          
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Ciclo
          31
          
        
      
        
          Coordinatore
          
          
        
      
        
          Settore disciplinare
          
          
        
      
        
          Settore concorsuale
          
          
        
      
        
          Parole chiave
          Gas Separation, Membrane Technology, Carbon Capture, Energy Efficiency, CANALs, ROMPs, Mixed-Gas Sorption, Plasticization, Physical Aging
          
        
      
        
          URN:NBN
          
          
        
      
        
          DOI
          10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/9067
          
        
      
        
          Data di discussione
          12 Aprile 2019
          
        
      
      URI
      
      
     
   
  
  
  
  
  
    
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