MRS Meetings and Events

 

NM06.02.02 2022 MRS Spring Meeting

Direct Chemical Vapor Deposition Synthesis of Porous Single-Layer Graphene Membranes with High Gas Permeances and Selectivities

When and Where

May 11, 2022
2:00pm - 2:30pm

Hawai'i Convention Center, Level 3, 303A

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Zhe Yuan1,Guangwei He1,Samuel Faucher1,Matthias Kuehne1,Sylvia Li1,Daniel Blankschtein1,Michael Strano1

Massachusetts Institute of Technology1

Abstract

Zhe Yuan1,Guangwei He1,Samuel Faucher1,Matthias Kuehne1,Sylvia Li1,Daniel Blankschtein1,Michael Strano1

Massachusetts Institute of Technology1
Single-layer graphene containing molecular-sized in-plane pores is regarded as a promising membrane material for high-performance gas separations due to its atomic thickness and low gas transport resistance. However, typical etching-based pore generation methods cannot decouple pore nucleation and pore growth, resulting in a trade-off between high areal pore density and high selectivity. In contrast, intrinsic pores in graphene formed during chemical vapor deposition (CVD) are not created by etching. Therefore, intrinsically porous graphene can exhibit high pore density while maintaining its gas selectivity. In this work, the density of intrinsic graphene pores is systematically controlled for the first time, while appropriate pore sizes for gas sieving are precisely maintained. As a result, single-layer graphene membranes with the highest H<sub>2</sub>/CH<sub>4</sub> separation performances recorded to date (H<sub>2</sub> permeance &gt; 4000 GPU and H<sub>2</sub>/CH<sub>4</sub> selectivity &gt; 2000) are fabricated by manipulating growth temperature, precursor concentration, and non-covalent decoration of the graphene surface. Moreover, we identify that nanoscale molecular fouling of the graphene surface during gas separation where graphene pores are partially blocked by hydrocarbon contaminants under experimental conditions, controls both selectivity and temperature dependent permeance. Overall, the direct synthesis of porous single-layer graphene exploits its tremendous potential as high-performance gas-sieving membranes.

Keywords

chemical vapor deposition (CVD) (deposition) | diffusion | graphene

Symposium Organizers

Piran Ravichandran Kidambi, Vanderbilt University
Michael Boutilier, Western University
Shannon Mahurin, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Sui Zhang, National University of Singapore

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature