Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, Vol.34, No.6, 2021-2028, 1995
A New Class of Non-Zeolitic Sorbents for Air Separation - Lithium Ion-Exchanged Pillared Clays
Zeolites are the only known sorbents that adsorb N-2 selectively over O-2, and are used for industrial air separation. Pillared clays (PILCs) have a high Bronsted acidity (i.e., high proton density). It is found in this study that when the protons are exchanged by alkali metal ions, in particular Li+, the ion exchanged pillared clays can exhibit a high N-2/O-2 adsorption selectivity that rivals that of the zeolites. Our first result shows a pure-component adsorption ratio of N-2/O-2 = 3.2 (at 25 degrees C and 1 atm) for Li+-exchanged PILC. The N-2 capacity, however, is only 20% that of the zeolite, and remains to be improved. A systematic investigation is conducted on the effects of three factors on the N-2/O-2 selectivity : (1) starting clays (tetrahedral vs octahedral isomorphous substitution and clays with different charge densities), (2) different metal oxides as pillars, and (3) different ion exchange alkali metal cations (Li+, Na+, K+, Rb+, and Cs+). The highest N-2/O-2 selectivities are achieved by using clays with the highest charge densities, metal oxides forming pillars with the narrowest gallery spaces, and ion exchange cations with the smallest ionic radii. Effects by all three factors are qualitatively understood. The high N-2/O-2 selectivity on the Li+ exchanged PILC is the result of the small ionic radius (and hence high polarizing power) of Li+ and the strong quadrupole moment of the N-2 molecule. Moreover, a technique is developed with which the amount of the exchanged cations can exceed that allowed by the original cation exchange capacity of the clay by using a high pH value in the ion exchange solution.