The
permeability–selectivity upper bounds show that perfluoropolymers
have uniquely different separation characteristics than hydrocarbon-based
polymers. For separating helium from hydrogen, these differences are
particularly dramatic. At a given helium permeability, the upper bound
defined by perfluoropolymers has helium/hydrogen selectivities that
are 2.5 times higher than that of the upper bound defined by hydrocarbon-based
polymers. Robeson hypothesized that these differences in transport
properties resulted from the unusual sorption relationships of gases
in perfluoropolymers compared to hydrocarbon-based polymers, and this
paper seeks to test this hypothesis experimentally. To do so, the
gas permeability, sorption, and diffusion coefficients were determined
at 35 °C for hydrogen and helium in a series of hydrocarbon-,
silicon-, and fluorocarbon-based polymers. Highly or completely fluorinated
polymers have separation characteristics above the upper-bound for
helium/hydrogen separation because they maintain good diffusivity
selectivities for helium over hydrogen and they have helium/hydrogen
sorption selectivities much closer to unity than those of hydrocarbon-based
samples. The silicon-based polymer had intermediate sorption selectivities
between those of hydrocarbon-based polymers and perfluoropolymers.
Comparisons of hydrogen and helium sorption data in the literature
more broadly extend the conclusion that helium/hydrogen sorption selectivity
is rather different in hydrocarbon and fluorocarbon-based media.
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