CA2024974A1 - Flat stack permeator - Google Patents
Flat stack permeatorInfo
- Publication number
- CA2024974A1 CA2024974A1 CA002024974A CA2024974A CA2024974A1 CA 2024974 A1 CA2024974 A1 CA 2024974A1 CA 002024974 A CA002024974 A CA 002024974A CA 2024974 A CA2024974 A CA 2024974A CA 2024974 A1 CA2024974 A1 CA 2024974A1
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- membrane
- module
- feed
- retentate
- edges
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Abandoned
Links
Classifications
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D63/00—Apparatus in general for separation processes using semi-permeable membranes
- B01D63/08—Flat membrane modules
- B01D63/082—Flat membrane modules comprising a stack of flat membranes
Landscapes
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
- Separation Using Semi-Permeable Membranes (AREA)
Abstract
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
The present invention is a flat stack perme-ator useful under dialysis, ultrafiltration, reverse osmosis, perstraction, pervaporation, etc. conditions.
The permeator comprises a multitude of membrane layer alternately separated by feed-retentate spacers and permeate spacers. The layers are secured along their edges so as to define separate feed-reten-tate zones and permeate zone. The edge gluing is performed so that in any given layer the two parallel edges are secured, while on the layers immediately above and below the edge pairs which are secured are 90° out of register with the previously mentioned pair of secured edges. In that way alternate feed retentate and permeate zones are defined which are perpendicular in flow one to the other.
This stack of membrane and spacer layer is fabricated between flat rigid, solid, non-permeable sheets, the membrane sheets immediately adjacent to said solid sheets being edge glued to the sheet along the proper edge defining a feed-retentate or permeate zone as appropriate to form a module.
This module is fitted with manifolds to provide a feed-retentate entrance-exit pair and sepa-rate permeate exits. Alternatively the module can be inserted into an appropriately manifolded pressure vessel.
The present invention is a flat stack perme-ator useful under dialysis, ultrafiltration, reverse osmosis, perstraction, pervaporation, etc. conditions.
The permeator comprises a multitude of membrane layer alternately separated by feed-retentate spacers and permeate spacers. The layers are secured along their edges so as to define separate feed-reten-tate zones and permeate zone. The edge gluing is performed so that in any given layer the two parallel edges are secured, while on the layers immediately above and below the edge pairs which are secured are 90° out of register with the previously mentioned pair of secured edges. In that way alternate feed retentate and permeate zones are defined which are perpendicular in flow one to the other.
This stack of membrane and spacer layer is fabricated between flat rigid, solid, non-permeable sheets, the membrane sheets immediately adjacent to said solid sheets being edge glued to the sheet along the proper edge defining a feed-retentate or permeate zone as appropriate to form a module.
This module is fitted with manifolds to provide a feed-retentate entrance-exit pair and sepa-rate permeate exits. Alternatively the module can be inserted into an appropriately manifolded pressure vessel.
Description
7 ~.~
Field of the Invention The present invention is a flat stack perme-ator made from flat sheets of membrane material, useful for separating compounds under dialysis, ultrafiltra-tion, reverse osmosis, perstraction, pervaporation, etc. type separation mechanisms and at elevated temper-atures and pressures. This membrane element design can also be used for the fabrication of membrane reactor elements, i.e., elements in which the membrane sheets contains reaction inducing or acceleration components such as catalysts.
Descri~tion of_the Fiqure Figure 1 presents a preferred embodiment of the flat stack permeator of th~ present invention.
Figure 2 presents a pressure vessel into which a module can be placed, Figure 2a presents a view of the pressure vessel cover plate.
Figure 3 presents different view of the pressure vessel.
Figure 4 presents a view of the baffle plate.
Figure S presents a schematic of the flat stack module.
Back~round of the Invention Flat plate and frame membrane elements made-up of alternating sheets of 2 ~ 7 ~
membrane-permeate/product spacer-membrane-feed/reten-tate spacer-membrane, etc. are useful when the materi-als of construction which are used to fabricate the elements are stiff, not bendable or pliable or ~rittle, thus making fabrication of spiral wound elements extremely difficult if not impossible. However, traditional flat plate and frame membrane elements are usually characterized by the need to provide indepen-dent manifold means for each individual permeate zone and feed/retentate zone in the membrane stack. Even if such independent multiple manifold means are not required because of the ability to gang or group the numerous permeate zones and retentate zones and service each group by a single permeate manifold and feed/-retentate manifold, the traditional flat plate and frame design usually employs long bolts to hold the entire assembly together and provide the compression needed to seal the permeate zones from the retentate zones. If bolts are not used the securing of the zones usually depends on mechanical clamping or other means for producing compression on the edges of the membrane envelopes to produce the seals necessary to result in the creation of permeate zones and feed/retentate zones. Over time and during use the bolts or the other mechanical clamping or compression inducing means tend to loosen due to compaction of the materials of con-struction of the membrane elements or physical, chemi-cal or thermal deterioration of the materials. This results in a loss of compression on the element and compromise of element integrity permitting migration of feed into the permeate zone.
It would be an advantage if flat stack membrane elements could be produced which take advan-tage of the ability to employ stiff, brittle or unbend-able materials in their ~onstruction, and which can use permeate and retentate manifolds servicing numerous 2 ~ 7 i~
Field of the Invention The present invention is a flat stack perme-ator made from flat sheets of membrane material, useful for separating compounds under dialysis, ultrafiltra-tion, reverse osmosis, perstraction, pervaporation, etc. type separation mechanisms and at elevated temper-atures and pressures. This membrane element design can also be used for the fabrication of membrane reactor elements, i.e., elements in which the membrane sheets contains reaction inducing or acceleration components such as catalysts.
Descri~tion of_the Fiqure Figure 1 presents a preferred embodiment of the flat stack permeator of th~ present invention.
Figure 2 presents a pressure vessel into which a module can be placed, Figure 2a presents a view of the pressure vessel cover plate.
Figure 3 presents different view of the pressure vessel.
Figure 4 presents a view of the baffle plate.
Figure S presents a schematic of the flat stack module.
Back~round of the Invention Flat plate and frame membrane elements made-up of alternating sheets of 2 ~ 7 ~
membrane-permeate/product spacer-membrane-feed/reten-tate spacer-membrane, etc. are useful when the materi-als of construction which are used to fabricate the elements are stiff, not bendable or pliable or ~rittle, thus making fabrication of spiral wound elements extremely difficult if not impossible. However, traditional flat plate and frame membrane elements are usually characterized by the need to provide indepen-dent manifold means for each individual permeate zone and feed/retentate zone in the membrane stack. Even if such independent multiple manifold means are not required because of the ability to gang or group the numerous permeate zones and retentate zones and service each group by a single permeate manifold and feed/-retentate manifold, the traditional flat plate and frame design usually employs long bolts to hold the entire assembly together and provide the compression needed to seal the permeate zones from the retentate zones. If bolts are not used the securing of the zones usually depends on mechanical clamping or other means for producing compression on the edges of the membrane envelopes to produce the seals necessary to result in the creation of permeate zones and feed/retentate zones. Over time and during use the bolts or the other mechanical clamping or compression inducing means tend to loosen due to compaction of the materials of con-struction of the membrane elements or physical, chemi-cal or thermal deterioration of the materials. This results in a loss of compression on the element and compromise of element integrity permitting migration of feed into the permeate zone.
It would be an advantage if flat stack membrane elements could be produced which take advan-tage of the ability to employ stiff, brittle or unbend-able materials in their ~onstruction, and which can use permeate and retentate manifolds servicing numerous 2 ~ 7 i~
ganged or grouped permeate and retentate zones in the stack but which do not rely on bolts, mechanical clamps or other compression inducing means to produce the seals between membrane sheets needed to produce fluid tight permeate zones and retentate zones in the ele-ments. Such an element would exhibit integrity over long periods of use with minimal or no maintenance.
Descri~tion of the Invention The permeator of the present invention comprises a multitude of membrane layers alternately separated by feed-retentate spacers and permeate/-product spacers. The membrane layers are flat sheets secured by glue or adhesive or otherwise attached such as by heat induced melt welding or chemical welding using a dissolving solvent along their edges so as to define separate feed-retentate zones and a permeate/-product zone. As used hereinafter in the specification and claims, the term "secured" is understood to mean the aforementioned techniques. The edge securing is performed so that for a given pair of membrane layers two parallel edges are secured, while for the membrane layers immediately above and below the aforesaid pair of membrane layers the edge pairs which are secured to the edges of the membrane layers of the aforesaid pair are 90~ out of register with the previously mentioned pair of secured edges. In that way alternate-feed retentate and permeate zones are defined which are perpendicular in flow one to the other. As is seen, adhesive glue or chemical or heat melt welding secure the module together and insures the fluid integrity of each permeate zone and retentate zone in the membrane stack. During fabrication the element is held in a press or between clamps only for as long as is needed for the adhesives or glues to set and cure.
q /r ~I rJ ,~
This stack of membrane sheets and spacer layers may be fabricated between flat, rigid or flexi-ble, solid, permeable or non-permeable structural sheets, the membrane layers immediately adjacent to said solid sheets being secured using an adhesive along their entire face to the solid structural sheet or along the proper alternating edge thereby defining a feed-retentate or permeate/product zone, as appropri-ate, to form a module.
This module can be fitted with multiple manifolds serving the groups of permeate/product zones and retentate zones to provide a feed-retentate entrance-exit pair and separate permeate exit. Alter-natively the module can be inserted into an appropri-ately manifolded pressure vessel. The pressure vessel can be held together by bolts, or other mechanical means, but these bolts are not primarily responsible for the integrity of the membrane module wherein adhesives secure the membrane edges rather than relying on mechanical clamping~ The bolts or ~echanical clamping elements are used to hold the housing elements together.
The flat stack permeator of the present invention can employ sheets of membrane made from any polymeric material or non-polymeric material ~uch as ceramic. Thus even membranes which are extremely thin or fragile or stiff can be used because the membrane materials need not be bent in fabricating the module.
Similarly, feed-retentate spacer materials and perme-ate/product spacer materials need not be pliable but can themselves be stiff, because, they too, need not be bent in fabricating the modul~s~ Because the membrane need not be pliable the membrane used in fabricating the flat stack permeators are not necessarily polymeric materials but can even be ceramic, glass, carbon fiber 2 ~
or sihtered metal sheets which would allow the permeator of the present invention to be used under extremely high temperatures, the upper limit being set only by the maximum temperature to which the glues or adhesives used in effecting the seals can be exposed.
Furthermore, because there is no limitation on the nature of the membrane layer, the module can be employed as a membrane reactor wherein the membrane includes reaction inducing or accelerating agents such as catalyst so that feed enters one face of the mem-brane, reacts due to contact with or upon passage through the membrane and exits the opposite membrane face as a product/permeate which is subsequently recovered. Feed-retentate spacers and permeate spacers made of wire or corrugated metal sheets or rods can be used as can be heat and solvent resistant plastic weaves, rods or corrugated sheets. Further, because the spacer material will not be bent or folded or wrapped it can be thicker than usually employed in fabricating spiral wound elements. The feed-retentate and permeate spacer sheets can be the same size as the flat membrane sheets extending into the glue/adhesive area, discussed below, used to fabricate the module.
The flat, rigid, solid, non-permeable sheets between which the membrane-spacer stack is fabricated can also be selected from a broad range of materials depending on the service in which the permeator will be used. Thus the sheets can be selected from metal (i.e.
aluminum, brass, steel etc.) plastic, fiberglass reinforced epoxy sheets, glass composite sheets, impermeable graphite sheets etc. The selection of material will, of course, depend on the liquids and/or gases, as well as the temperatures and pressures to which the unit will be exposed during use.
The adhesives used in fabricating the flat stack permeator are selected from those which are resistant to the liquid or gas environment to which they will be exposed as well as resistant to the temperatures and pressures of operation. The adhesives must also be capable of forming bonds/seals between different materials, P.g. between layers of membranes, between membranes and spacer materials, between mem-branes and flat, rigid solid non-permeable sheets making up the module housing. These adhesives will generally be commercially available adhesives. Occa sionally it will be necessary to prime the surfaces to be glued to achieve adequate seals, in accordance with manufacturer instructions. Adhesives which have been found useful in forming edge seals in spiral wound membrane modules for use in dewaxing solvent environ-ments are epoxies disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,464,494 while adhesives which are useful in forming edge seals in spiral wound membrane modules for use in aromatic extraction solvent environments are silicons disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,582,726, the disclosures of both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The flat stack permeator may contain any number of membrane layers alternately separated by feed-retentate spacers and permeate spacers, but at least one pair of feed-retentate/permeate zones is needed. The upper limit on the number of such zones is set merely by handling consideration of the practi-tioner. Length and width dimensions are similarly set by the hydrodynamics of the system. The length of the permeate leaf (zone) is limited by the viscosity of the permeate and the permeation rate which create a given pressure drop. An acceptable level is set by the leaf thickness. Similarly, for the feed-retentate zone, the leaf thickness and length for a given feed viscosity and flow rate are limited by the acceptable pressure drop. The flat stack permeation can be square or rectangular. When rectangular in shape the choice of which dimension corresponds to the feed-retentate zone or permeate zone is again within the discretion of the practitioner.
Following fabrication, the module can be trimmed along its edges to produce flush, square and perpendicular faces.
The flat, rigid, solid sheets which are present on opposite faces of the module and define the module can, if desired, have edges along all four sides which bear flanges to which can be attached ths mani-folding means servicing the groups of permeate zones and retentate zones in the element stack and defining feed-retentate entrance and exit means and permeate exit means. In this way, if the flat, rigid sheets are strong enough for the intended service the module is, per se, the entire separation apparatus.
If the module is to be u~ed under extremes of temperature, pressure or in other aggressive environ-ments, or if the flat sheets defining the body of the module are flexible or are themselves permeable the module (preferably after being trimmed to produce flush, perpendicular faces) can be inserted into a pressure vessel corresponding in shape to that of the module. This housing has manifolding means defining a feed-retentate entrance-exit pair and permeate exit means which is perpendicular to the aforesaid feed-retentate entrance-exit pair. The pressure vessel is held together using bolts or other mechanical means.
These bolts or mechanical means are not employed to compress the membrane stack but simply to hold the housing together.
~ ~ ~I L ~ il ~
As an alternative to the previous descrip-tion, the flat stack permeators can use sheets of membrane materials which can he folded. When using foldable sheets, the sheets of membrane are folded around the spacer material to form a leaf and layers of the complimentary spacer material are placed between pairs of membrane leaves. The three membrane edges in adjacent membrane leaves two of which are 90 out of register with and the other opposite to the membrane edqe fold of the leaves are secured with adhesive or glue while the membrane edges in each individual leaf which are parallel to the fold are similarly secured by adhesive or glue to thereby define feed-retentate zones and permeate zones, the flows in which zones will be perpendicular.
In order to insure the structural integrity of the membrane at the fold line (i.e. to reduce the possibility of membrane blow-out or rupture) precau-tions should be taken to insure that the membrane stack package at the side of the module in which the fold is located is not loose. Additional compaction along that edge of the package results in a module which is sufficiently tight to prevent blow outs. This can be accomplished any number of ways. Extra material such as additional strips of membrane material or spacer material can be laid at the fold so that upon clamping and compaction during construction a tight package is produced. The reinforcing strip adds to the thickness dimension of the package, but only at the fold posi-tion. Hence, when the package is manufactured and placed into a clamp or press during construction to obtain equal channel height throughout the package, the exi~tence of the reinforcing strip results in extra compression at this critical fold point and prevents rupture at the fold. Alternatively and in a preferred embodiment using folded membrane sheets, the fold edge is itself reinforced to prevent blow out of the mem-brane (if used under pressure) along the folded edge.
The reinforcing is accomplished by use of a strip of material, such as teflon, positioned at the inside of the fold and optionally along the outside of the fold.
Preferably the reinforcing strip is an underlayer on the inside fold edge of the membrane. This narrow strip of material can be positioned along the fold edge and held in place either by friction i.e. just placed in position and held there by the dynamic pressure of being in contact with the e.g. feed/retentate spacer if placed along the inside fold edge and/or the e.g.
permeate spacer if placed along the outside fold edge, or by use of an adhesive. The adhesive can be a permanent, solvent resistant adhesive or it can be one which is used just to position the strip during fabri-cation but which dissolves during use of the module, the strip then being held in place simply by the nature of its location and position. The reinforcing material is typical 0.003 inches thick, but may be thinner if very strong materials are used or thicker if more reinforcing strength is necessary, and is selected from teflon, nylon, polyethylene or other plastics which are stable in the system, preferably teflon. The reinforc-ing step can even be just a strip of glue or adhesive, preferably a flexible glue or adhesive on the inside surface of the membrane at the fold line. An adhesive which is useful for reinforcing membrane fold lines in modules used for the separation of aromatics from non-aromatics in heavy cat naphtha feeds is Trabond 2125, a Novalac Resin with epoxy hardeners modified with Butyl benzyl phthalate (10-20%) as a flexibilizer.
The reinforcing strip extends the entire length of the fold but is only wide enough to extend a short distance on either side of the fold line. As a further option a sheet of permeate spacer can be wrapped around the 7 ~
folded membrane edge in place of or in addition to the usual sheet of permeate spacer material.
Again the stack is fabricated between flat, solid, rigid or flexible, permeable or non-permeable structural sheets of material secured by adhesive or glue to the faces of the membrane layer immediately adjacent to such flat, solid, rigid or flexible, permeable or non-permeable structural sheets to form a module and this module can be manifolded as such to form a separation apparatus or inserted into an appro-priately manifolded pressured vessel as previously described. When such a folded membrane is employed trimming is practiced to "true-up" the module to produce flush, perpendicular faces on all four sides, care being taken during trimming to prevent damage to the three outer edge glue lines and also so that the internal me~brane fold is not cut and remains intact.
If a separate pressure vessel is needed, the flat stack of membrane leaves must be prepared for insertion into the vessel housing. Metal l'L" shaped flanges are affixed to the stack of membrane leaves between the structural sheets. The metal flanges are affixed along the edge corresponding to the membrane fold lines. Alternatively the structural sheets have integral flanges. In such a case when the membrane stack employs folded membrane sheets the membrane stack is fabricated so that when the me~brane stack is placed between the two structure sheets the membrane fold edge is just inside the plane of the flange faces. The flange permits the module to be secured into the vessel housing and isolates the permeate zones from the feed/retentate zones. Metal (i.e. aluminum or other compatible metal) blocks equal in height to the stack are glued to the stack along the edges perpendicular to the edge at which the membrane is folded, or, if no T~
folded membrane is used, the permeate exit edge, the blocks beiny short in length and located close to the edge at which the membrane is folded, or, if no folded membrane is used, the permeate exit edge, to insure that no feed or retentate can leak past the edges into the permeate zone. Holes both in the flanges and metal blocks align with the bolt holes in the face of the baffle plate of the housing vessel so that the membrane stack can be secured into the housing vessel.
Prior to the hardening of the adhesive (but subsequent to the membrane stack trimming step) the membrane stack and attached short metal blocks are placed between the structural sheets of material used to define the module. The structural sheets extend beyond the edges of the membrane stack along the feed/retentate edges of the stack but the sides of the structural sheets corresponding to the permeate edge of the stack are flush with that edge. The structural sheets are clamped or bolted to compact the membrane stack prior to the glue finally curing and hardening.
The integrity of the membrane element is achie~ed using the adhesive and glue rather than the bolts. While the bolts are not responsible for maintaining the seal between msmbrane edges to define permeate zones and retentate zones, the compaction caused by using bolts helps prevent blow out of the membrane fold and tele-scoping of the package due to high feed flow rates.
The presence of the bolts will also help to physically prevent telescoping. A sheet of gasket material such as Klingerite or a bead of gasket material is placed between the faces of the flanges and the baffle plate of the housing vessel to create a seal.
The Figure 1 presents one embodiment of the apparatus. The figure shows a three membrane leaf module in cross section along one of the edges. The r~ r~
membrane sheet ~1) is folded around the feed-retentate spacer (2). The ends of the folded membrane sheet opposite the fold line are secured (e.g. glued) (2A) along its entire length to thereby define a closed area. The membrane sheet has a reinforcing strip of material (A) at the inside of the fold, the leaves are separated by the permeate spacers (3). An optional sheet of permeate spacer material (3A) can be over-wrapped around the folded membrane. The permeate zone (4) is defined by applying glue (5) along the edges (6) of the me~branes in adjacent leaves along the three edges which are (I) 9o out of register with and (II) opposite to the membrane edge fold. The three leaves are sandwiched between flat, rigid, solid sheets of material (7) to form a stack module in which feed-retentate flow (8) is perpendicular to permeate flow (9). The figure shows the module housing as containing integral permeate manifolding means (10) separated from the stack by a baffle plate and screen (11). Alterna-tively stack modules without integral permanent mani-folding can be inserted into a pressure vessel as shown in Figure 2. This vessel comprises a receptacle (1) into which the module is placed, then a cover plate Figure (2a) is secured to close the vessel. The stack module does not completely fill the receptacle but leaves an open zone (3) defined by a baffle plate or screen (4) which creates a manifold for collecting permeate from the individual permeate zones to a permeate exit means. The stack module fits snugly between the feed-retentate entrance/exit means ~5) and keeps the feed-retentate separate from the permeate and permeate exit means (6). Figures 3 and 4 present another view of housing 1 and shows the placement of the baffle (3) as well as the profile of the baffle (Figure 4).
~ ~3 Figure 5 presents a schematic of a flat stack module. The stack (1) of membrane leaves, permPate spacers and retentate spacers, appropriately glued along the proper edges (as previously described) is trimmed along all four edges to produce flush perpen-dicular and squared faces. Two short blocks (4) equal in height to the memkrane stack are glued to the stack of membranes along a short length of edges a and c and flush with the permeate edge of the stack (zone B) and have glue applied to the faces corresponding to the interior faces of the sheets of structural material.
The stack (1) is placed between two sheets of struc-tural material (2) which have flanges (3) either attached thereto or as an integral part of the sheet.
The membrane stack (1) is glued along 3 edges (a - c) on both the upper and lower sides (I and II) to the sheets of structural material (2) which sheets extend beyond the membrane stack (1) along the feed/retentate edges (edges a and c).
Following the application of glue along the aforesaid edges of the membrane stack and faces of the blocks and the insertion of said stack and blocks between the structural sheets, the sheets of structural material are bolted together using bolts (5) before the glue dries to effect the compaction of the membrane stack and create flush tight seals between the feed/-retentate zone (A) and the permeate zone (B).
The module is then inserted into the housing vessel (see figures 2, 3 and 4). The module face defined by the flanges and blocks has a gasket sheet or bead of gasket material applied to it and then is mated to the baffle plate (figure 4) using bolts inserted through bolt holes (6) present in the flanges and corresponding bolt holes in the baffle plate (figure 4). Once the module is inserted into the housing and J t~ `3 bolted into place the cover plate (figure 2a) is attached to the top of the vessel housing (figure 2).
Example A flat stack module was prepared using polyurea/urethane membranes on Teflon support. The membrane is cast by using a polymer made from a 70/30 blend of 5D0/2000 MW polyethylene adipate end-capped with 4,4' diisocyanate-diphenyl methane and chain extended using 4,4' diamino diphenylmethane. A suspen-sion of this polymer in DMF is coated onto a sheet of porous Teflon using the technique disclosed and claimed in U.S. Patent 4,861,628. The Polyurea/urethane membrane is itself described in U.S. Patent 4,914,064.
Sheets of membrane material were separated by alternat-ing layers of feed/retentate spacer material, Tetco 1400 and p~rmeate spacer material, also Tetco 1400.
Tetco 1400 is a polyester woven monofilament mesh. It has a thickness of 28.5 mils with 14 strands per inch mesh count. It gives low pressure drop for the feed viscosities and flow rates used. The membrane on Teflon was further supported using a polyester trecot identified as Trecot 9628. The adhesive used for fabrication was a Novalac Resin with epoxy hardners modified with butyl benzyl phthalate (10-20%) as a flexibilizer, identified as Trabond 2125. All metal elements were constructed of aluminum. The aluminum had to be prepped before application of the adhesive by the steps of degreasing the aluminum surface with a solvent (in this case Naphtha 1520), roughing the aluminum surface with emery cloth although sand blast-ing would also work, coating the roughened surface with a thin layer of a primer, in this case B.F. Goodrich Primer A937BY, a silane compound. Membrane fold reinforcing material was 0.03 inch Teflon sheet. This module was successfully tested for one month at 140C
2 ~
in a pervaporation mode for the separation of aromatics from non-aromatics on heavy cat naphtha feed.
Descri~tion of the Invention The permeator of the present invention comprises a multitude of membrane layers alternately separated by feed-retentate spacers and permeate/-product spacers. The membrane layers are flat sheets secured by glue or adhesive or otherwise attached such as by heat induced melt welding or chemical welding using a dissolving solvent along their edges so as to define separate feed-retentate zones and a permeate/-product zone. As used hereinafter in the specification and claims, the term "secured" is understood to mean the aforementioned techniques. The edge securing is performed so that for a given pair of membrane layers two parallel edges are secured, while for the membrane layers immediately above and below the aforesaid pair of membrane layers the edge pairs which are secured to the edges of the membrane layers of the aforesaid pair are 90~ out of register with the previously mentioned pair of secured edges. In that way alternate-feed retentate and permeate zones are defined which are perpendicular in flow one to the other. As is seen, adhesive glue or chemical or heat melt welding secure the module together and insures the fluid integrity of each permeate zone and retentate zone in the membrane stack. During fabrication the element is held in a press or between clamps only for as long as is needed for the adhesives or glues to set and cure.
q /r ~I rJ ,~
This stack of membrane sheets and spacer layers may be fabricated between flat, rigid or flexi-ble, solid, permeable or non-permeable structural sheets, the membrane layers immediately adjacent to said solid sheets being secured using an adhesive along their entire face to the solid structural sheet or along the proper alternating edge thereby defining a feed-retentate or permeate/product zone, as appropri-ate, to form a module.
This module can be fitted with multiple manifolds serving the groups of permeate/product zones and retentate zones to provide a feed-retentate entrance-exit pair and separate permeate exit. Alter-natively the module can be inserted into an appropri-ately manifolded pressure vessel. The pressure vessel can be held together by bolts, or other mechanical means, but these bolts are not primarily responsible for the integrity of the membrane module wherein adhesives secure the membrane edges rather than relying on mechanical clamping~ The bolts or ~echanical clamping elements are used to hold the housing elements together.
The flat stack permeator of the present invention can employ sheets of membrane made from any polymeric material or non-polymeric material ~uch as ceramic. Thus even membranes which are extremely thin or fragile or stiff can be used because the membrane materials need not be bent in fabricating the module.
Similarly, feed-retentate spacer materials and perme-ate/product spacer materials need not be pliable but can themselves be stiff, because, they too, need not be bent in fabricating the modul~s~ Because the membrane need not be pliable the membrane used in fabricating the flat stack permeators are not necessarily polymeric materials but can even be ceramic, glass, carbon fiber 2 ~
or sihtered metal sheets which would allow the permeator of the present invention to be used under extremely high temperatures, the upper limit being set only by the maximum temperature to which the glues or adhesives used in effecting the seals can be exposed.
Furthermore, because there is no limitation on the nature of the membrane layer, the module can be employed as a membrane reactor wherein the membrane includes reaction inducing or accelerating agents such as catalyst so that feed enters one face of the mem-brane, reacts due to contact with or upon passage through the membrane and exits the opposite membrane face as a product/permeate which is subsequently recovered. Feed-retentate spacers and permeate spacers made of wire or corrugated metal sheets or rods can be used as can be heat and solvent resistant plastic weaves, rods or corrugated sheets. Further, because the spacer material will not be bent or folded or wrapped it can be thicker than usually employed in fabricating spiral wound elements. The feed-retentate and permeate spacer sheets can be the same size as the flat membrane sheets extending into the glue/adhesive area, discussed below, used to fabricate the module.
The flat, rigid, solid, non-permeable sheets between which the membrane-spacer stack is fabricated can also be selected from a broad range of materials depending on the service in which the permeator will be used. Thus the sheets can be selected from metal (i.e.
aluminum, brass, steel etc.) plastic, fiberglass reinforced epoxy sheets, glass composite sheets, impermeable graphite sheets etc. The selection of material will, of course, depend on the liquids and/or gases, as well as the temperatures and pressures to which the unit will be exposed during use.
The adhesives used in fabricating the flat stack permeator are selected from those which are resistant to the liquid or gas environment to which they will be exposed as well as resistant to the temperatures and pressures of operation. The adhesives must also be capable of forming bonds/seals between different materials, P.g. between layers of membranes, between membranes and spacer materials, between mem-branes and flat, rigid solid non-permeable sheets making up the module housing. These adhesives will generally be commercially available adhesives. Occa sionally it will be necessary to prime the surfaces to be glued to achieve adequate seals, in accordance with manufacturer instructions. Adhesives which have been found useful in forming edge seals in spiral wound membrane modules for use in dewaxing solvent environ-ments are epoxies disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,464,494 while adhesives which are useful in forming edge seals in spiral wound membrane modules for use in aromatic extraction solvent environments are silicons disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,582,726, the disclosures of both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The flat stack permeator may contain any number of membrane layers alternately separated by feed-retentate spacers and permeate spacers, but at least one pair of feed-retentate/permeate zones is needed. The upper limit on the number of such zones is set merely by handling consideration of the practi-tioner. Length and width dimensions are similarly set by the hydrodynamics of the system. The length of the permeate leaf (zone) is limited by the viscosity of the permeate and the permeation rate which create a given pressure drop. An acceptable level is set by the leaf thickness. Similarly, for the feed-retentate zone, the leaf thickness and length for a given feed viscosity and flow rate are limited by the acceptable pressure drop. The flat stack permeation can be square or rectangular. When rectangular in shape the choice of which dimension corresponds to the feed-retentate zone or permeate zone is again within the discretion of the practitioner.
Following fabrication, the module can be trimmed along its edges to produce flush, square and perpendicular faces.
The flat, rigid, solid sheets which are present on opposite faces of the module and define the module can, if desired, have edges along all four sides which bear flanges to which can be attached ths mani-folding means servicing the groups of permeate zones and retentate zones in the element stack and defining feed-retentate entrance and exit means and permeate exit means. In this way, if the flat, rigid sheets are strong enough for the intended service the module is, per se, the entire separation apparatus.
If the module is to be u~ed under extremes of temperature, pressure or in other aggressive environ-ments, or if the flat sheets defining the body of the module are flexible or are themselves permeable the module (preferably after being trimmed to produce flush, perpendicular faces) can be inserted into a pressure vessel corresponding in shape to that of the module. This housing has manifolding means defining a feed-retentate entrance-exit pair and permeate exit means which is perpendicular to the aforesaid feed-retentate entrance-exit pair. The pressure vessel is held together using bolts or other mechanical means.
These bolts or mechanical means are not employed to compress the membrane stack but simply to hold the housing together.
~ ~ ~I L ~ il ~
As an alternative to the previous descrip-tion, the flat stack permeators can use sheets of membrane materials which can he folded. When using foldable sheets, the sheets of membrane are folded around the spacer material to form a leaf and layers of the complimentary spacer material are placed between pairs of membrane leaves. The three membrane edges in adjacent membrane leaves two of which are 90 out of register with and the other opposite to the membrane edqe fold of the leaves are secured with adhesive or glue while the membrane edges in each individual leaf which are parallel to the fold are similarly secured by adhesive or glue to thereby define feed-retentate zones and permeate zones, the flows in which zones will be perpendicular.
In order to insure the structural integrity of the membrane at the fold line (i.e. to reduce the possibility of membrane blow-out or rupture) precau-tions should be taken to insure that the membrane stack package at the side of the module in which the fold is located is not loose. Additional compaction along that edge of the package results in a module which is sufficiently tight to prevent blow outs. This can be accomplished any number of ways. Extra material such as additional strips of membrane material or spacer material can be laid at the fold so that upon clamping and compaction during construction a tight package is produced. The reinforcing strip adds to the thickness dimension of the package, but only at the fold posi-tion. Hence, when the package is manufactured and placed into a clamp or press during construction to obtain equal channel height throughout the package, the exi~tence of the reinforcing strip results in extra compression at this critical fold point and prevents rupture at the fold. Alternatively and in a preferred embodiment using folded membrane sheets, the fold edge is itself reinforced to prevent blow out of the mem-brane (if used under pressure) along the folded edge.
The reinforcing is accomplished by use of a strip of material, such as teflon, positioned at the inside of the fold and optionally along the outside of the fold.
Preferably the reinforcing strip is an underlayer on the inside fold edge of the membrane. This narrow strip of material can be positioned along the fold edge and held in place either by friction i.e. just placed in position and held there by the dynamic pressure of being in contact with the e.g. feed/retentate spacer if placed along the inside fold edge and/or the e.g.
permeate spacer if placed along the outside fold edge, or by use of an adhesive. The adhesive can be a permanent, solvent resistant adhesive or it can be one which is used just to position the strip during fabri-cation but which dissolves during use of the module, the strip then being held in place simply by the nature of its location and position. The reinforcing material is typical 0.003 inches thick, but may be thinner if very strong materials are used or thicker if more reinforcing strength is necessary, and is selected from teflon, nylon, polyethylene or other plastics which are stable in the system, preferably teflon. The reinforc-ing step can even be just a strip of glue or adhesive, preferably a flexible glue or adhesive on the inside surface of the membrane at the fold line. An adhesive which is useful for reinforcing membrane fold lines in modules used for the separation of aromatics from non-aromatics in heavy cat naphtha feeds is Trabond 2125, a Novalac Resin with epoxy hardeners modified with Butyl benzyl phthalate (10-20%) as a flexibilizer.
The reinforcing strip extends the entire length of the fold but is only wide enough to extend a short distance on either side of the fold line. As a further option a sheet of permeate spacer can be wrapped around the 7 ~
folded membrane edge in place of or in addition to the usual sheet of permeate spacer material.
Again the stack is fabricated between flat, solid, rigid or flexible, permeable or non-permeable structural sheets of material secured by adhesive or glue to the faces of the membrane layer immediately adjacent to such flat, solid, rigid or flexible, permeable or non-permeable structural sheets to form a module and this module can be manifolded as such to form a separation apparatus or inserted into an appro-priately manifolded pressured vessel as previously described. When such a folded membrane is employed trimming is practiced to "true-up" the module to produce flush, perpendicular faces on all four sides, care being taken during trimming to prevent damage to the three outer edge glue lines and also so that the internal me~brane fold is not cut and remains intact.
If a separate pressure vessel is needed, the flat stack of membrane leaves must be prepared for insertion into the vessel housing. Metal l'L" shaped flanges are affixed to the stack of membrane leaves between the structural sheets. The metal flanges are affixed along the edge corresponding to the membrane fold lines. Alternatively the structural sheets have integral flanges. In such a case when the membrane stack employs folded membrane sheets the membrane stack is fabricated so that when the me~brane stack is placed between the two structure sheets the membrane fold edge is just inside the plane of the flange faces. The flange permits the module to be secured into the vessel housing and isolates the permeate zones from the feed/retentate zones. Metal (i.e. aluminum or other compatible metal) blocks equal in height to the stack are glued to the stack along the edges perpendicular to the edge at which the membrane is folded, or, if no T~
folded membrane is used, the permeate exit edge, the blocks beiny short in length and located close to the edge at which the membrane is folded, or, if no folded membrane is used, the permeate exit edge, to insure that no feed or retentate can leak past the edges into the permeate zone. Holes both in the flanges and metal blocks align with the bolt holes in the face of the baffle plate of the housing vessel so that the membrane stack can be secured into the housing vessel.
Prior to the hardening of the adhesive (but subsequent to the membrane stack trimming step) the membrane stack and attached short metal blocks are placed between the structural sheets of material used to define the module. The structural sheets extend beyond the edges of the membrane stack along the feed/retentate edges of the stack but the sides of the structural sheets corresponding to the permeate edge of the stack are flush with that edge. The structural sheets are clamped or bolted to compact the membrane stack prior to the glue finally curing and hardening.
The integrity of the membrane element is achie~ed using the adhesive and glue rather than the bolts. While the bolts are not responsible for maintaining the seal between msmbrane edges to define permeate zones and retentate zones, the compaction caused by using bolts helps prevent blow out of the membrane fold and tele-scoping of the package due to high feed flow rates.
The presence of the bolts will also help to physically prevent telescoping. A sheet of gasket material such as Klingerite or a bead of gasket material is placed between the faces of the flanges and the baffle plate of the housing vessel to create a seal.
The Figure 1 presents one embodiment of the apparatus. The figure shows a three membrane leaf module in cross section along one of the edges. The r~ r~
membrane sheet ~1) is folded around the feed-retentate spacer (2). The ends of the folded membrane sheet opposite the fold line are secured (e.g. glued) (2A) along its entire length to thereby define a closed area. The membrane sheet has a reinforcing strip of material (A) at the inside of the fold, the leaves are separated by the permeate spacers (3). An optional sheet of permeate spacer material (3A) can be over-wrapped around the folded membrane. The permeate zone (4) is defined by applying glue (5) along the edges (6) of the me~branes in adjacent leaves along the three edges which are (I) 9o out of register with and (II) opposite to the membrane edge fold. The three leaves are sandwiched between flat, rigid, solid sheets of material (7) to form a stack module in which feed-retentate flow (8) is perpendicular to permeate flow (9). The figure shows the module housing as containing integral permeate manifolding means (10) separated from the stack by a baffle plate and screen (11). Alterna-tively stack modules without integral permanent mani-folding can be inserted into a pressure vessel as shown in Figure 2. This vessel comprises a receptacle (1) into which the module is placed, then a cover plate Figure (2a) is secured to close the vessel. The stack module does not completely fill the receptacle but leaves an open zone (3) defined by a baffle plate or screen (4) which creates a manifold for collecting permeate from the individual permeate zones to a permeate exit means. The stack module fits snugly between the feed-retentate entrance/exit means ~5) and keeps the feed-retentate separate from the permeate and permeate exit means (6). Figures 3 and 4 present another view of housing 1 and shows the placement of the baffle (3) as well as the profile of the baffle (Figure 4).
~ ~3 Figure 5 presents a schematic of a flat stack module. The stack (1) of membrane leaves, permPate spacers and retentate spacers, appropriately glued along the proper edges (as previously described) is trimmed along all four edges to produce flush perpen-dicular and squared faces. Two short blocks (4) equal in height to the memkrane stack are glued to the stack of membranes along a short length of edges a and c and flush with the permeate edge of the stack (zone B) and have glue applied to the faces corresponding to the interior faces of the sheets of structural material.
The stack (1) is placed between two sheets of struc-tural material (2) which have flanges (3) either attached thereto or as an integral part of the sheet.
The membrane stack (1) is glued along 3 edges (a - c) on both the upper and lower sides (I and II) to the sheets of structural material (2) which sheets extend beyond the membrane stack (1) along the feed/retentate edges (edges a and c).
Following the application of glue along the aforesaid edges of the membrane stack and faces of the blocks and the insertion of said stack and blocks between the structural sheets, the sheets of structural material are bolted together using bolts (5) before the glue dries to effect the compaction of the membrane stack and create flush tight seals between the feed/-retentate zone (A) and the permeate zone (B).
The module is then inserted into the housing vessel (see figures 2, 3 and 4). The module face defined by the flanges and blocks has a gasket sheet or bead of gasket material applied to it and then is mated to the baffle plate (figure 4) using bolts inserted through bolt holes (6) present in the flanges and corresponding bolt holes in the baffle plate (figure 4). Once the module is inserted into the housing and J t~ `3 bolted into place the cover plate (figure 2a) is attached to the top of the vessel housing (figure 2).
Example A flat stack module was prepared using polyurea/urethane membranes on Teflon support. The membrane is cast by using a polymer made from a 70/30 blend of 5D0/2000 MW polyethylene adipate end-capped with 4,4' diisocyanate-diphenyl methane and chain extended using 4,4' diamino diphenylmethane. A suspen-sion of this polymer in DMF is coated onto a sheet of porous Teflon using the technique disclosed and claimed in U.S. Patent 4,861,628. The Polyurea/urethane membrane is itself described in U.S. Patent 4,914,064.
Sheets of membrane material were separated by alternat-ing layers of feed/retentate spacer material, Tetco 1400 and p~rmeate spacer material, also Tetco 1400.
Tetco 1400 is a polyester woven monofilament mesh. It has a thickness of 28.5 mils with 14 strands per inch mesh count. It gives low pressure drop for the feed viscosities and flow rates used. The membrane on Teflon was further supported using a polyester trecot identified as Trecot 9628. The adhesive used for fabrication was a Novalac Resin with epoxy hardners modified with butyl benzyl phthalate (10-20%) as a flexibilizer, identified as Trabond 2125. All metal elements were constructed of aluminum. The aluminum had to be prepped before application of the adhesive by the steps of degreasing the aluminum surface with a solvent (in this case Naphtha 1520), roughing the aluminum surface with emery cloth although sand blast-ing would also work, coating the roughened surface with a thin layer of a primer, in this case B.F. Goodrich Primer A937BY, a silane compound. Membrane fold reinforcing material was 0.03 inch Teflon sheet. This module was successfully tested for one month at 140C
2 ~
in a pervaporation mode for the separation of aromatics from non-aromatics on heavy cat naphtha feed.
Claims (10)
1. A flat stack permeator module comprising a multitude of membrane layers alternately separated by feed-retentate spacer material and permeate spacer material to define a stack wherein the membrane layers are secured along their edges so as to define separate feed-retentate zones and permeate zones, the edge securing being performed so that for any pair of membrane layers the two parallel edges are secured while for the membrane layers immediately above and below the aforesaid pair of membrane layers, the edges which are secured to the edges of the membrane layers of the aforesaid pair are 90° out of register with the previously identified pair of secured edges, thereby defining alternate feed retentate and permeate zones which are perpendicular in flow to each other, the stack being assembled between sheets of material defining the body of the module to which the membrane layers adjacent to the sheets of material are secured.
2. The module of claim 1 wherein the mem-brane layers are folded around a spacer material to form a leaf with layers of the complementary spacer material placed between pairs of membrane leaves, in which the three membrane edges in adjacent membrane leaves two of which are 90° out of register with, and one of which is opposite the membrane edge fold of the leaf are secured to define feed-retentate zone and permeator zones.
3. The module of claim 1 wherein the sheet material defining the module is solid, rigid and non-permeable and the edges of which bear flanges to which are attached manifolding means defining feed retentate entrance and exit means and permeator means.
4. The module of claim 1 wherein the sheet material defining the module is solid, flexible and permeable and the module is inserted into a pressure vessel equipped with the manifolding means defining feed-retentate entrance-exit means and permeator exit means.
5. The module of claim 1 or 2 wherein the membrane edges are secured by glue or adhesive.
6. The module of claim 1 or 2 wherein the membrane edges are secured by heat induced melt weld-ing.
7. The module of claim 2 wherein the folded edge of the membrane is reinforced using a strip of adhesive located along the fold line.
8. The module of claim 2 wherein the folded edge of the membrane is reinforced using a pair of strips of reinforcing material located at the interior face and/or outer face of the membrane along the fold line.
9. The module of claim 7, or 8 wherein the reinforcing material is teflon.
10. The module of claim 7, 8, or 9 wherein an extra sheet of permeate spacer material is over wrapped around the folded membrane.
Applications Claiming Priority (5)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US40799289A | 1989-09-15 | 1989-09-15 | |
US407,992 | 1989-09-15 | ||
US528,311 | 1990-05-24 | ||
US07/528,311 US5104532A (en) | 1989-09-15 | 1990-05-24 | Flat stack permeator |
SG158894A SG158894G (en) | 1989-09-15 | 1994-10-27 | Flat stack permeator module |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA2024974A1 true CA2024974A1 (en) | 1991-03-16 |
Family
ID=27356101
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA002024974A Abandoned CA2024974A1 (en) | 1989-09-15 | 1990-09-10 | Flat stack permeator |
Country Status (6)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US5104532A (en) |
EP (1) | EP0418063B1 (en) |
JP (1) | JPH03174227A (en) |
CA (1) | CA2024974A1 (en) |
DE (1) | DE69008086T2 (en) |
SG (1) | SG158894G (en) |
Families Citing this family (55)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5298669A (en) * | 1993-03-23 | 1994-03-29 | Exxon Chemical Patent Inc. | Perstraction sweep stream for a membrane reactor |
SE503277C2 (en) * | 1993-07-20 | 1996-05-13 | Alfa Laval Brewery Syst Ab | Filters intended for cross-flow filtration |
US6322697B1 (en) | 1999-07-19 | 2001-11-27 | Donaldson Company, Inc. | Oil filter assembly |
DE19938674C2 (en) * | 1999-08-06 | 2001-10-31 | Fraunhofer Ges Forschung | Flat membrane stack and process for its manufacture |
US7115150B2 (en) | 2000-09-05 | 2006-10-03 | Donaldson Company, Inc. | Mist filtration arrangement utilizing fine fiber layer in contact with media having a pleated construction and floor filter method |
US6503295B1 (en) | 2000-09-20 | 2003-01-07 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Gas separations using mixed matrix membranes |
DE20016417U1 (en) * | 2000-09-21 | 2002-02-14 | Wehrle Werk Ag | Device for separating liquid and solid from a suspension |
US6500233B1 (en) | 2000-10-26 | 2002-12-31 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Purification of p-xylene using composite mixed matrix membranes |
US6896796B2 (en) * | 2001-02-16 | 2005-05-24 | W. R. Grace & Co.-Conn. | Membrane separation for sulfur reduction |
US20030126990A1 (en) * | 2001-12-20 | 2003-07-10 | Koros William J. | Crosslinked and crosslinkable hollow fiber membrane and method of making same |
US20030131731A1 (en) | 2001-12-20 | 2003-07-17 | Koros William J. | Crosslinked and crosslinkable hollow fiber mixed matrix membrane and method of making same |
US7105089B2 (en) | 2003-03-13 | 2006-09-12 | 3M Innovative Properties Company | Liquid—liquid extraction system and method |
US7122709B2 (en) | 2003-03-13 | 2006-10-17 | 3M Innovative Properties Company | Method for obtaining ethanol |
US7268094B2 (en) * | 2003-08-18 | 2007-09-11 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Mixed matrix membrane with super water washed silica containing molecular sieves and methods for making and using the same |
US7267761B2 (en) * | 2003-09-26 | 2007-09-11 | W.R. Grace & Co.-Conn. | Method of reducing sulfur in hydrocarbon feedstock using a membrane separation zone |
US7279215B2 (en) * | 2003-12-03 | 2007-10-09 | 3M Innovative Properties Company | Membrane modules and integrated membrane cassettes |
US7166146B2 (en) * | 2003-12-24 | 2007-01-23 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Mixed matrix membranes with small pore molecular sieves and methods for making and using the membranes |
US7138006B2 (en) * | 2003-12-24 | 2006-11-21 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Mixed matrix membranes with low silica-to-alumina ratio molecular sieves and methods for making and using the membranes |
EP1781395A4 (en) * | 2004-07-12 | 2008-10-01 | Schroeder Ind Llc | Replaceable filter element with integral annular trap |
US7306647B2 (en) * | 2004-11-19 | 2007-12-11 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Mixed matrix membrane with mesoporous particles and methods for making and using the same |
US7485173B1 (en) * | 2005-12-15 | 2009-02-03 | Uop Llc | Cross-linkable and cross-linked mixed matrix membranes and methods of making the same |
US8083833B2 (en) * | 2006-03-10 | 2011-12-27 | Uop Llc | Flexible template-directed microporous partially pyrolyzed polymeric membranes |
US20070209505A1 (en) * | 2006-03-10 | 2007-09-13 | Chunqing Liu | High Flux Mixed Matrix Membranes for Separations |
US7846496B2 (en) * | 2006-03-10 | 2010-12-07 | Uop Llc | Mixed matrix membranes incorporating surface-functionalized molecular sieve nanoparticles and methods for making the same |
US7897207B2 (en) * | 2006-03-10 | 2011-03-01 | Uop Llc | Nano-molecular sieve-polymer mixed matrix membranes with significantly improved gas separation performance |
US7637983B1 (en) | 2006-06-30 | 2009-12-29 | Uop Llc | Metal organic framework—polymer mixed matrix membranes |
US7758751B1 (en) | 2006-11-29 | 2010-07-20 | Uop Llc | UV-cross-linked membranes from polymers of intrinsic microporosity for liquid separations |
US7815712B2 (en) * | 2006-12-18 | 2010-10-19 | Uop Llc | Method of making high performance mixed matrix membranes using suspensions containing polymers and polymer stabilized molecular sieves |
US20080142440A1 (en) * | 2006-12-18 | 2008-06-19 | Chunqing Liu | Liquid Separations Using High Performance Mixed Matrix Membranes |
US7998246B2 (en) * | 2006-12-18 | 2011-08-16 | Uop Llc | Gas separations using high performance mixed matrix membranes |
US20080143014A1 (en) * | 2006-12-18 | 2008-06-19 | Man-Wing Tang | Asymmetric Gas Separation Membranes with Superior Capabilities for Gas Separation |
US8221531B2 (en) * | 2007-12-31 | 2012-07-17 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Crosslinked polyimide membrane, method for making the same using organic titanate catalysts to facilitate crosslinking and method of using the membrane for fluid separation |
US7981974B2 (en) * | 2008-01-10 | 2011-07-19 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Method of making a high molecular weight, monoesterified polyimide polymer |
US8066799B2 (en) | 2008-01-10 | 2011-11-29 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Method of making a crosslinked fiber membrane from a high molecular weight, monoesterified polyimide polymer |
WO2009118789A1 (en) * | 2008-03-27 | 2009-10-01 | 株式会社クボタ | Membrane element and membrane module |
US7790803B2 (en) * | 2008-06-02 | 2010-09-07 | Uop Llc | Crosslinked organic-inorganic hybrid membranes and their use in gas separation |
US20110163002A1 (en) * | 2008-09-15 | 2011-07-07 | Patent Department | Process for enhanced propylene yield from cracked hydrocarbon feedstocks and reduced benzene in resulting naphtha fractions |
US7875177B2 (en) * | 2008-12-09 | 2011-01-25 | Dow Global Technologies Inc. | Membrane leaf packet with reinforced fold |
US8192524B2 (en) * | 2009-01-29 | 2012-06-05 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Process for upgrading natural gas with improved management of CO2 |
US20110138999A1 (en) * | 2009-12-15 | 2011-06-16 | Uop Llc | Metal organic framework polymer mixed matrix membranes |
RU2548078C2 (en) | 2010-05-13 | 2015-04-10 | Эр Продактс Энд Кемикалз, Инк. | Polymers, polymer membranes and methods for production thereof |
US8449651B2 (en) | 2010-08-25 | 2013-05-28 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Methods of preparing a crosslinked fiber membrane |
US9162208B2 (en) | 2011-10-04 | 2015-10-20 | Chevron U.S.A. Inc. | Process and system for producing synthetic crude oil from offshore produced fluids containing high CO2 content |
US9675937B2 (en) | 2011-10-19 | 2017-06-13 | General Electric Company | Spiral wound membrane permeate carrier with thin border |
US9522363B2 (en) | 2011-10-19 | 2016-12-20 | General Electric Company | Material efficiency and fabrication of membrane elements |
US8753426B2 (en) | 2012-08-03 | 2014-06-17 | Air Products And Chemicals, Inc. | Polymers, polymer membranes and methods of producing the same |
KR20150096441A (en) | 2012-12-14 | 2015-08-24 | 제네럴 일렉트릭 컴퍼니 | Flat reverse osmosis module and system |
WO2014092725A1 (en) | 2012-12-14 | 2014-06-19 | General Electric Company | Membrane stack filtration module |
IL265376B1 (en) | 2016-09-20 | 2024-04-01 | Aqua Membranes Llc | Permeate flow patterns |
WO2018094287A1 (en) | 2016-11-19 | 2018-05-24 | Aqua Membranes Llc | Interfernce patterns for spiral-wound elements |
US11090612B2 (en) | 2017-04-12 | 2021-08-17 | Aqua Membranes Inc. | Graded spacers for filtration wound elements |
US11745143B2 (en) | 2017-04-20 | 2023-09-05 | Aqua Membranes, Inc. | Mixing-promoting spacer patterns for spiral-wound elements |
JP2020517423A (en) | 2017-04-20 | 2020-06-18 | アクア メンブレインズ,インコーポレイテッド | Non-nesting, non-deformed pattern for spiral wound elements |
US11745144B2 (en) | 2017-10-13 | 2023-09-05 | Aqua Membranes Inc. | Bridge support and reduced feed spacers for spiral-wound elements |
JP2023521977A (en) | 2020-04-07 | 2023-05-26 | アクア メンブレインズ,インコーポレイテッド | Independent spacer and method |
Family Cites Families (36)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3367504A (en) * | 1964-12-21 | 1968-02-06 | Gulf General Atomic Inc | Spirally wrapped reverse osmosis membrane cell |
US3417870A (en) * | 1965-03-22 | 1968-12-24 | Gulf General Atomic Inc | Reverse osmosis purification apparatus |
US3398091A (en) * | 1966-08-09 | 1968-08-20 | Ionics | Membrane separation apparatus and process |
US3522885A (en) * | 1968-04-18 | 1970-08-04 | Atomic Energy Commission | Parallel flow hemodialyzer |
UST867005I4 (en) * | 1968-09-30 | 1969-10-21 | Artificial dialyzing body organ | |
US3520803A (en) * | 1968-12-24 | 1970-07-21 | Ionics | Membrane fluid separation apparatus and process |
AT300734B (en) * | 1969-03-06 | 1972-08-10 | Biotest Serum Institut Gmbh | Device for sterile exchange of substances in solutions |
US3565258A (en) * | 1969-06-06 | 1971-02-23 | Atomic Energy Commission | Parallel flow hemodialyzer |
JPS504629B1 (en) * | 1970-12-30 | 1975-02-21 | ||
US3701431A (en) * | 1971-05-19 | 1972-10-31 | Eastman Kodak Co | Reverse osmosis apparatus and method for making same |
US3834544A (en) * | 1971-07-06 | 1974-09-10 | Cutter Lab | Membrane diffusion apparatus |
US3768660A (en) * | 1972-02-14 | 1973-10-30 | Raypak Inc | Reverse osmosis cell with turbulator means |
US3786925A (en) * | 1972-02-14 | 1974-01-22 | Raypak Inc | Means for sealing membrane carrying tubes |
BE790299A (en) * | 1972-03-10 | 1973-02-15 | Atomic Energy Commission | FOLDED DIAPHRAGM DIALYZER, AND PROCESS FOR FORMING IT |
US3909418A (en) * | 1973-01-15 | 1975-09-30 | Universal Oil Prod Co | Method for forming a laminate member and apparatus utilizing the same |
FR2231411B1 (en) * | 1973-05-29 | 1978-06-30 | Rhone Poulenc Sa | |
US3864265A (en) * | 1973-06-25 | 1975-02-04 | Galen Lab Inc | Edge sealed folded membrane |
FR2287934A1 (en) * | 1974-10-15 | 1976-05-14 | Rhone Poulenc Ind | TUBULAR MEMBRANES ON SUPPORTS FOR THE TREATMENT OF FLUIDS |
NL7415083A (en) * | 1974-11-19 | 1976-05-21 | Wafilin Bv | Membrane filter - with a stack of parallel flat units each having membranes on each face of a support |
US4019988A (en) * | 1975-08-28 | 1977-04-26 | Extracorporeal Medical Specialities Inc. | Dialyzer membrane seal and tubing connector |
US4009108A (en) * | 1975-10-08 | 1977-02-22 | Baxter Laboratories, Inc. | Dialyzer construction |
US4009107A (en) * | 1975-10-08 | 1977-02-22 | Baxter Laboratories, Inc. | Multi-level support member for use with semipermeable membrane |
IT1049757B (en) * | 1975-11-24 | 1981-02-10 | Montedison Spa | MEMBRANE MODULE FOR REVERSE OSMOSIS OR ULTRAFILTRATION PROCESSES |
GB1568731A (en) * | 1976-09-30 | 1980-06-04 | Japan Found Artificial Organs | Blood-gas exchanger units |
US4163721A (en) * | 1977-04-04 | 1979-08-07 | Cobe Laboratories, Inc. | Edge sealed pleated membrane |
DE2833966A1 (en) * | 1977-08-08 | 1979-02-22 | Us Energy | HAEMODIALYZER |
US4199458A (en) * | 1978-08-28 | 1980-04-22 | Baxter Travenol Laboratories, Inc. | Membrane diffusion device with external compression |
DE3028398C2 (en) * | 1980-07-26 | 1982-11-11 | Sartorius GmbH, 3400 Göttingen | Device for ultrafiltration, in particular for treating blood |
DE3130742A1 (en) * | 1981-08-04 | 1983-02-24 | Uhde Gmbh, 4600 Dortmund | MONOPOLAR ELECTROLYTIC FILTER PRESS CELL |
DE3141388A1 (en) * | 1981-10-17 | 1983-06-09 | Sartorius GmbH, 3400 Göttingen | Filter unit |
DD201387A1 (en) * | 1981-12-24 | 1983-07-20 | Siegfried Dreyer | FLAT MEMBRANE TRENNGERAET |
DE3304956A1 (en) * | 1983-02-12 | 1984-08-16 | Gkss - Forschungszentrum Geesthacht Gmbh, 2054 Geesthacht | DEVICE FOR SEPARATING SOLUTIONS BY PERVAPORATION |
GB2192812B (en) * | 1986-07-25 | 1990-01-24 | Domnick Hunter Filters Ltd | Filtration device. |
US4761229A (en) * | 1987-06-22 | 1988-08-02 | Thompson John A | Multi-leaf membrane module |
US4822382A (en) * | 1987-11-02 | 1989-04-18 | Union Carbide Corporation | Composite membranes, their manufacture and their use |
JPH0935194A (en) * | 1995-07-13 | 1997-02-07 | Isao Fukuda | System for reporting unoccupied parking space in parking area |
-
1990
- 1990-05-24 US US07/528,311 patent/US5104532A/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1990-09-10 CA CA002024974A patent/CA2024974A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 1990-09-12 EP EP90309993A patent/EP0418063B1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1990-09-12 DE DE69008086T patent/DE69008086T2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1990-09-17 JP JP2246946A patent/JPH03174227A/en active Pending
-
1994
- 1994-10-27 SG SG158894A patent/SG158894G/en unknown
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP0418063A1 (en) | 1991-03-20 |
DE69008086D1 (en) | 1994-05-19 |
JPH03174227A (en) | 1991-07-29 |
DE69008086T2 (en) | 1994-07-28 |
US5104532A (en) | 1992-04-14 |
EP0418063B1 (en) | 1994-04-13 |
SG158894G (en) | 1995-03-17 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US5104532A (en) | Flat stack permeator | |
US5182019A (en) | Cartridge of hybrid frameless arrays of hollow fiber membranes and module containing an assembly of cartridges | |
EP0238737B1 (en) | Membrane assembly for fluid separation-disk | |
US5174900A (en) | Apparatus for separation and for treatment of fluid feedstreams, wafers for use therein and related methods | |
US5114582A (en) | Filter element and spiral-wound membrane cartridge containing same | |
US5104535A (en) | Frameless array of hollow fiber membranes and module containing a stack of arrays | |
US5366625A (en) | Cartridge of hybrid unitary wafers of hollow fiber membranes and module containing a stack of post-potted cartridges | |
US4855058A (en) | High recovery spiral wound membrane element | |
KR940004620B1 (en) | Hollow fiber multimembrane cell and permeators | |
US7959805B2 (en) | Manifold adaptor plate for filtration apparatus | |
AU678359B2 (en) | Cassette membrane system and method of use for low pressure separations | |
EP0251620B1 (en) | Spiral wound membrane filtration device and filtration method using such device | |
JP2013544642A (en) | Membrane separation module | |
US20080251442A1 (en) | Fluid Treatment Assemblies and Elements and Methods for Making Them | |
EP0591982B1 (en) | Housing for permeation separation device | |
US5232593A (en) | Cartridge of hollow fiber membrane wafers and module containing stacked cartridges | |
US3494465A (en) | Selectively permeable membrane separation apparatus | |
US4761229A (en) | Multi-leaf membrane module | |
US5164081A (en) | Apparatus for separation and for treatment of fluid feedstreams, wafers for use therein and related methods | |
US5000855A (en) | Transverse sheet membrane separation module, components thereof and related methods | |
US3948777A (en) | Solution separating and recovering equipment | |
EP0585614A2 (en) | Hollow fiber permeator with tubesheet preform | |
US20210205759A1 (en) | Potted flat sheet membrane filtration module | |
JPS5962326A (en) | Gas separation module | |
WO2000027511A1 (en) | High flow high recovery spirally wound filtration element |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
FZDE | Discontinued |