Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, Vol.36, No.1, 137-143, 1997
Separations of Cyclic, Branched, and Linear Hydrocarbon Mixtures Through Silicalite Membranes
Binary and ternary mixtures of organic vapors were separated at elevated temperatures with a silicalite zeolite membrane on a porous, tubular, gamma-alumina support. Linear alkanes (C-5-C-9), branched alkanes, aromatics, and saturated ring compounds were used as feeds, and permeances of pure compounds and mixtures were measured between similar to 360 and 510 K. Pure compound permeances of the linear alkanes strongly decrease with increasing chain length, whereas the branched and cyclic compounds]permeate at rates similar to those of n-hexane and n-heptane. Almost all permeances increase with increasing temperature. Mixtures of branched or cyclic molecules with small linear alkanes were readily separated with high selectivities (over 200 for n-hexane/benzene), even though the ratios of pure component permeances were small. The separation behavior is not due to molecular sieving but instead appears to be due to preferential adsorption (adsorption on external surface, pore entering, adsorption in pores) of one species, which prevents the other organics from adsorbing and transporting through the membrane. Mixtures of cyclic or branched molecules showed small or no separations. For all systems, separations factors decrease as temperature increases apparently because preferential adsorption becomes less important at elevated temperatures. For mixtures of benzene or methylyclohexane with 2,2,4-trimethylpentane and for mixtures of 2,2-dimethylbutane with 3-methylpentane, both compounds permeated at similar rates and no separations were obtained. Single-file transport in the zeolite channels is suspected to limit transport. The membranes have intercrystalline regions in parallel with the zeolite pores that may also permeate the organics.