Author/Authors :
Jorge Espeso، نويسنده , , Angel E. Lozano، نويسنده , , José G. de la Campa، نويسنده , , Javier de Abajo، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Aromatic polyamides, designed for evaluation as gas separation membranes, were processed into dense films, whose properties were measured with special emphasis on their mechanical and thermal properties. The polymers had been synthesized from monomers bearing side substituents, such as methyl, iso-propyl or tert-butyl, and various hinge-like connecting linkages of p-phenylene moieties, which yielded amorphous aromatic polyamides, with improved solubility, high glass transition temperatures (over 250 °C) and excellent mechanical properties (tensile strength about 100 MPa, and moduli about 2.0 GPa). The permeability of the polymer films were investigated using helium, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide and methane. Gas permeability typically increased with increasing free volume, and, in general, free volume could be related to the chemical structure. The analysis of the transport parameters (permeability, diffusivity and solubility coefficients) as a function of the chemical structure, confirmed the predominant role of the side substituents and of the linking groups connecting phenylene units on the permeation properties. Besides, a molecular modelling study carried out via computational chemistry, made it clear that an acceptable theoretical explanation can be given of how the nature of hinge groups between aromatic rings can affect torsional mobility and gas diffusion of aromatic polyamides.
Keywords :
Gas permeation , Dense membranes , molecular modelling , Aromatic polyamides