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Description
Membrane-based technology for gas separations is currently at an emerging stage of advancement and adoption for environmental and industrial applications due to its substantial advantages like lower energy and operating costs over the conventional gas separation technologies. Unfortunately, the available polymeric (or organic) membranes suffer a trade-off between permeance and

Membrane-based technology for gas separations is currently at an emerging stage of advancement and adoption for environmental and industrial applications due to its substantial advantages like lower energy and operating costs over the conventional gas separation technologies. Unfortunately, the available polymeric (or organic) membranes suffer a trade-off between permeance and selectivity. Mixed matrix membranes (MMMs) containing two-dimensional (2D) metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as fillers are a highly sought approach to redress this trade-off given their enhanced gas permeabilities and selectivities compared to the pure polymeric membrane. These MMMs are increasingly gaining attention by researchers due to their unique properties and wide small- and large-scale gas separation applications. However, straightforward and scalable methods for the synthesis of MOFs nanosheets have thus far been persistently elusive. This study reports the single-phase preparation, and characterization of MMMs with 2D MOFs nanosheets as fillers. The prepared MOF and the polymer matrix form the ‘dense’ MMMs which exhibit increased gas diffusion resistance, and thus improved separation abilities. The single-phase approach was more successful than the bi-phase at synthesizing the MOFs. The influence of sonication power and time on the characteristics and performance of the membranes are examined and discussed. Increasing the sonication power from 50% to 100% reduces the pore size. Additionally, the ultimate effect on the selectivity and permeance of the MMMs with different single gases is reported. Analysis of results with various gas mixers indicates further performance improvements in these MMMs could be achieved by increasing sonication time and tuning suitable membrane thicknesses. Reported results reveal that MMMs are excellent candidates for next-generation gas mixture separations, with potential applications in CO2 capture and storage, hydrogen recovery, alkene recovery from alkanes, and natural gas purification.
ContributorsNkuutu, John (Author) / Mu, Bin (Thesis director) / Shan, Bohan (Committee member) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / School of Sustainability (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2019-05
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Description
Rotary drums are commonly used for their high heat and mass transfer rates in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, cement, food, and other particulate products. These processes are difficult to model because the particulate behavior is governed by the process conditions such as particle size, particle size distribution, shape, composition, and

Rotary drums are commonly used for their high heat and mass transfer rates in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, cement, food, and other particulate products. These processes are difficult to model because the particulate behavior is governed by the process conditions such as particle size, particle size distribution, shape, composition, and operating parameters, such as fill level and rotation rate. More research on heat transfer in rotary drums will increase operating efficiency, leading to tremendous energy savings on a global scale. This study investigates the effects of drum fill level and rotation rate on the steady-state average particle bed temperature. 3 mm silica beads and a stainless steel rotary drum were used at fill levels ranging from 10 \u2014 25 % and rotation rates from 2 \u2014 10 rpm. Four heat guns were used to heat the system via conduction and convection, and an infrared camera was used to record temperature data. A three-level, two-factor, full-factorial design of experiments was employed to determine the effects of each factor on the steady-state average bed temperature. Low fill level and high rotation rate resulted in higher steady-state average bed temperatures. A quantitative model showed that rotation rate had a larger impact on the steady-state bed temperature than fill level.
ContributorsBoepple, Brandon Richard (Author) / Emady, Heather (Thesis director) / Adepu, Manogna (Committee member) / W.P. Carey School of Business (Contributor) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2018-05
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Description
Layered double hydroxides (LDHs), also known as hydrotalcite-like materials, are extensively used as precursors for the preparation of (photo-)catalysts, electrodes, magnetic materials, sorbents, etc. The synthesis typically involves the transformation to the corresponding mixed metal oxide via calcination, resulting in atomically dispersed mixed metal oxides (MMOs). This process alters the

Layered double hydroxides (LDHs), also known as hydrotalcite-like materials, are extensively used as precursors for the preparation of (photo-)catalysts, electrodes, magnetic materials, sorbents, etc. The synthesis typically involves the transformation to the corresponding mixed metal oxide via calcination, resulting in atomically dispersed mixed metal oxides (MMOs). This process alters the porosity of the materials, with crucial implications for the performance in many applications. Yet, the mechanisms of pore formation and collapse are poorly understood. Combining an integrated in situ and ex situ characterization approach, here we follow the evolution of porosity changes during the thermal decomposition of LDHs integrating different divalent (Mg, Ni) and trivalent (Al, Ga) metals. Variations in porous properties determined by high-resolution argon sorption are linked to the morphological and compositional changes in the samples by in situ transmission electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, which is facilitated by the synthesis of well crystallized LDHs of large crystal size. The observations are correlated with the phase changes identified by X-ray diffraction, the mass losses evidenced by thermogravimetric analysis, the structural changes determined by infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and the pore connectivity analyzed by positron annihilation spectroscopy. The findings show that the multimetallic nature of the LDH governs the size and distribution (geometry, location, and connectivity) of the mesopores developed, which is controlled by the crystallization of the MMO phase, providing key insights for the improved design of porous mixed metal oxides.
ContributorsMurty, Rohan Aditya (Author) / Deng, Shuguang (Thesis director) / Nielsen, David R. (Committee member) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
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Description
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a new set of porous materials comprised of metals or metal clusters bonded together in a coordination system by organic linkers. They are becoming popular for gas separations due to their abilities to be tailored toward specific applications. Zirconium MOFs in particular are known for their

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a new set of porous materials comprised of metals or metal clusters bonded together in a coordination system by organic linkers. They are becoming popular for gas separations due to their abilities to be tailored toward specific applications. Zirconium MOFs in particular are known for their high stability under standard temperature and pressure due to the strength of the Zirconium-Oxygen coordination bond. However, the acid modulator needed to ensure long range order of the product also prevents complete linker deprotonation. This leads to a powder product that cannot easily be incorporated into continuous MOF membranes. This study therefore implemented a new bi-phase synthesis technique with a deprotonating agent to achieve intergrowth in UiO-66 membranes. Crystal intergrowth will allow for effective gas separations and future permeation testing. During experimentation, successful intergrown UiO-66 membranes were synthesized and characterized. The degree of intergrowth and crystal orientations varied with changing deprotonating agent concentration, modulator concentration, and ligand:modulator ratios. Further studies will focus on achieving the same results on porous substrates.
ContributorsClose, Emily Charlotte (Author) / Mu, Bin (Thesis director) / Shan, Bohan (Committee member) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
Within recent years, metal-organic frameworks, or MOF’s, have gained a lot of attention in the materials research community. These micro-porous materials are constructed of a metal oxide core and organic linkers, and have a wide-variety of applications due to their extensive material characteristic possibilities. The focus of this study is

Within recent years, metal-organic frameworks, or MOF’s, have gained a lot of attention in the materials research community. These micro-porous materials are constructed of a metal oxide core and organic linkers, and have a wide-variety of applications due to their extensive material characteristic possibilities. The focus of this study is the MOF-5 material, specifically its chemical stability in air. The MOF-5 material has a large pore size of 8 Å, and aperture sizes of 15 and 12 Å. The pore size, pore functionality, and physically stable structure makes MOF-5 a desirable material. MOF-5 holds applications in gas/liquid separation, catalysis, and gas storage. The main problem with the MOF-5 material, however, is its instability in atmospheric air. This inherent instability is due to the water in air binding to the zinc-oxide core, effectively changing the material and its structure. Because of this material weakness, the MOF-5 material is difficult to be utilized in industrial applications. Through the research efforts proposed by this study, the stability of the MOF-5 powder and membrane were studied. MOF-5 powder and a MOF-5 membrane were synthesized and characterized using XRD analysis. In an attempt to improve the stability of MOF-5 in air, methyl groups were added to the organic linker in order to hinder the interaction of water with the Zn4O core. This was done by replacing the terepthalic acid organic linker with 2,5-dimethyl terephthalic acid in the powder and membrane synthesis steps. The methyl-modified MOF-5 powder was found to be stable after several days of exposure to air while the MOF-5 powder exhibited significant crystalline change. The methyl-modified membrane was found to be unstable when synthesized using the same procedure as the MOF-5 membrane.
ContributorsAnderson, Anthony David (Author) / Lin, Jerry Y.S. (Thesis director) / Ibrahim, Amr (Committee member) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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Description
This report investigates the effects of autolyzing, fermentation medium, fermentation temperature, and proofing medium on the growth and porosity of 50% whole wheat sourdough bread. A model was designed using a 24 statistical design of experiment with replicates to screen and quantify the individual and combined effects of the aforementioned

This report investigates the effects of autolyzing, fermentation medium, fermentation temperature, and proofing medium on the growth and porosity of 50% whole wheat sourdough bread. A model was designed using a 24 statistical design of experiment with replicates to screen and quantify the individual and combined effects of the aforementioned factors on the area of a 1 cm cross-sectional cut from each loaf. Fermentation temperature had the single largest effect, with colder fermented loaves being on average 10 cm2 larger than their warmer fermented counter parts. Autolyzing had little individual effect, but the strengthened gluten network abated some of the degassing and overproofing that is a consequent handling the dough or letting it ferment too much. This investigation quantifies how to maximize gluten development and yeast growth to create the airiest whole wheat sourdough, a healthier and easier to digest bread than many commercially available.
ContributorsLay, Michael Loren (Author) / Emady, Heather (Thesis director) / Adepu, Manogna (Committee member) / School of Sustainability (Contributor) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2018-05
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Description
Membrane based technology is one of the principal methods currently in widespread use to address the global water shortage. Pervaporation desalination is a membrane technology for water purification currently under investigation as a method for processing reverse osmosis concentrates or for stand-alone applications. Concentration polarization is a potential problem in

Membrane based technology is one of the principal methods currently in widespread use to address the global water shortage. Pervaporation desalination is a membrane technology for water purification currently under investigation as a method for processing reverse osmosis concentrates or for stand-alone applications. Concentration polarization is a potential problem in any membrane separation. In desalination concentration polarization can lead to reduced water flux, increased propensity for membrane scaling, and decreased quality of the product water. Quantifying concentration polarization is important because reducing concentration polarization requires increased capital and operating costs in the form of feed spacers and high feed flow velocities. The prevalent methods for quantifying concentration polarization are based on the steady state thin film boundary layer theory. Baker’s method, previously used for pervaporation volatile organic compound separations but not desalination, was successfully applied to data from five previously published pervaporation desalination studies. Further investigation suggests that Baker’s method may not have wide applicability in desalination. Instead, the limitations of the steady state assumption were exposed. Additionally, preliminary results of nanophotonic enhancement of pervaporation membranes were found to produce significant flux enhancement. A novel theory on the mitigation of concentration polarization by the photothermal effect was discussed.
ContributorsMann, Stewart, Ph.D (Author) / Lind, Mary Laura (Thesis advisor) / Walker, Shane (Committee member) / Green, Matthew (Committee member) / Forzani, Erica (Committee member) / Emady, Heather (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Electrolytes play a critical role in electrochemical devices and applications, and therefore design and development of electrolytes with tailored properties are much desired to accommodate variety of operation requirements. Extreme temperatures are considered as one of the challenging environmental conditions, especially for devices rely on liquid state electrolytes, rendering failure

Electrolytes play a critical role in electrochemical devices and applications, and therefore design and development of electrolytes with tailored properties are much desired to accommodate variety of operation requirements. Extreme temperatures are considered as one of the challenging environmental conditions, especially for devices rely on liquid state electrolytes, rendering failure of operations once the electrolyte systems undergo phase transitions. This work focuses on development of low-temperature iodide-containing liquid electrolyte systems, specifically designed for the molecular electronic transducer (MET) sensors in space applications. Utilizing ionic liquids, molecular liquids, and salts, multiple low-temperature liquid electrolytes were designed with enhancements in thermal, transport, and electrochemical properties. Effects of intermolecular interactions were further investigated, revealing correlations between optimization of microscopic dynamics and improvements of macroscopic characteristics. As a result, three low-temperature electrolyte systems were reported utilizing ethylammonium/water, gamma-butyrolactone/propylene carbonate, and butyronitrile as solvent with ionic liquid, 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium iodide, and lithium iodide salt. Consequently, the liquidus range of these systems have been extended to -108 ˚C, -120 ˚C, and -152 ˚C, respectively, marking the lowest liquidus temperature of liquid electrolytes to the author’s best knowledge. Moreover, transport properties of designed systems were characterized from 25 to -75 ˚C. Effects of selected cosolvent/solvent on evolutions of transport properties were observed, revealing interplay between two governing mechanisms, ion disassociation and ion mobility, and their dominance at different temperatures. Experimental spectroscopy characterization techniques validated the hypothesized intermolecular interactions between solvent-cation and solvent-anion, complimented by computational simulation results on the complex dynamics between constituent ions and molecules. To support MET sensing technology, the essential iodide/triiodide redox were investigated in developed electrolytes. Effects of different molecular solvents on electrochemical kinetics were elucidated, and steady performances were validated under a properly controlled electrochemical window. Optimized electrolytes were tested in the MET sensor prototypes and showcased adequate functionality from calibration. The MET sensor prototype has also successfully detected real-time earthquake with low noise floor during long term testing at ASU seismology facility. The presented work demonstrates a facile design strategy for task-specific electrolyte development, which is anticipated to be further expanded to high temperatures for broader applications in the future.
ContributorsLin, Wendy Jessica (Author) / Dai, Lenore L (Thesis advisor) / Wiegart, Yu-chen Karen (Committee member) / Emady, Heather (Committee member) / Lind Thomas, MaryLaura (Committee member) / Torres, Cesar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Adsorption equilibrium is an important metric used to assess adsorbent performance for gas mixture separation processes. Gas adsorption processes such as carbon capture are becoming more urgent as climate change and global warming accelerate. To speed up and reduce the cost of research on adsorbent materials and adsorption processes, I

Adsorption equilibrium is an important metric used to assess adsorbent performance for gas mixture separation processes. Gas adsorption processes such as carbon capture are becoming more urgent as climate change and global warming accelerate. To speed up and reduce the cost of research on adsorbent materials and adsorption processes, I developed an open-source Python code that generates mixed gas adsorption equilibrium data using pure gas adsorption isotherms based on the ideal adsorbed solution theory (IAST). The major efforts of this M.S. research were placed on adding additional components to the mixture models since most other publications focused on binary gas mixtures. Generated mixed-gas equilibrium data were compared to experimentally collected data in order to validate the multicomponent IAST model and to determine the accuracy of the computer codes developed in this work. Additional mixed-gas equilibrium data were then generated and analyzed for trends in the data for humid flue gas conditions, natural gas processing conditions, and hydrogen gas purification conditions. For humid flue gas conditions, neither the analyzed Mg-MOF-74 nor the Zeolite 13X were shown to be suitable for use. For natural gas processing conditions, the Zeolite 13X was determined to be a much better candidate for use than the MIL-101. For hydrogen gas purification conditions, the Zeolite 5A was determined to be a better adsorbent for use than CD-AC due to the Zeolite 5A’s much lower adsorption of H2.
ContributorsCiha, Trevor (Author) / Deng, Shuguang (Thesis advisor) / Machas, Michael (Committee member) / Huang, Huei-Ping (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
CO2 capture from ambient air (often referred to as direct air capture or DAC) is one of the Carbon Dioxide Removal methodologies that may limit Global Warming. High energy demand and high cost are currently serious barriers for large-scale DAC deployments. Moisture-controlled CO2 sorption is a novel technology for DAC,

CO2 capture from ambient air (often referred to as direct air capture or DAC) is one of the Carbon Dioxide Removal methodologies that may limit Global Warming. High energy demand and high cost are currently serious barriers for large-scale DAC deployments. Moisture-controlled CO2 sorption is a novel technology for DAC, where CO2 sorption cycles are driven solely by changes in surrounding humidity. In contrast to traditional temperature-swing adsorption cycles, water is a cheaper source of exergy than high-grade heat or electricity and moisture-controlled CO2 sorption may reduce the cost of DAC. However, analytic models that describe this sorption system have not been well established, especially in a quantitative manner. In this dissertation the author first establishes both static and kinetic models analytically with bottom-up approaches from the governing equations. These models are of scientific interest and also of industrial importance. They were validated by literature data and custom experiments. In a second part of the dissertation, the author explores the application of moisture-controlled materials in the form of membranes that actively pump CO2 against a concentration gradient. These explorations are guided by the quantitative models developed in the first part of the dissertation. In CO2 separation technologies relying on actively pumping membranes, a moisture-controlled CO2 sorbent is used as either a gas-gas membrane contactor or a gas-liquid membrane contactor. The author experimentally and theoretically determined that a specific commercial anion exchange membrane that was considered a plausible candidate does not satisfy the requirements for such an active membrane as a consequence of its slow kinetics of carbon transport. Requirements for materials to serve as active membranes have been clarified, which is of great interest for industrial application and will provide a starting point for future material design and development.
ContributorsKaneko, Yuta (Author) / Lackner, Klaus S (Thesis advisor) / Green, Matthew D (Thesis advisor) / Dirks, Gary W (Committee member) / Wade, Jennifer L (Committee member) / Freeman, Benny D (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022