Modeling of Light Gases Purification and Carbon Dioxide Capture by 1B-3N and 1N-3B Defects
Parham Rezaee, Mohsen Tafazzoli

TL;DR
This study uses computational methods to demonstrate that defected h-BN membranes, specifically 1B-3N and 1N-3B defects, are promising for hydrogen purification, helium separation, and CO2 capture due to their high selectivity and acceptable permeance.
Contribution
The paper introduces a detailed computational analysis of defected h-BN membranes, highlighting their potential for gas separation and purification, which was not previously explored.
Findings
1N-3B defect shows high selectivity for H2/CO2 and other gases.
Permeance of 1B-3N defect is below industrial limits despite high selectivity.
Selectivity of H2 increases with temperature.
Abstract
In this study, we demonstrate that defected h--BN (1B-3N and 1N-3B defects) can be used as a suitable membrane for hydrogen purification and helium separation using density functional theory (DFT) calculations and molecular dynamics simulations (MD). At 300 K, DFT calculations show that the selectivity of , , , and are , , , and respectively for 1B-3N, while they are , , , and for 1N-3B. Although selectivity of 1B-3N defect is much higher than 1N-3B defect, the permeance of this defect is much lower than industrial limits. To confirm the result obtained by DFT calculations for gas separation performance of 1N-3B defect, the classical molecular dynamics simulations were further carried out. Molecular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMembrane Separation and Gas Transport · Graphene research and applications · Muon and positron interactions and applications
