Superadsorbent material system for improved filtration applications
09573090 ยท 2017-02-21
Assignee
Inventors
- Somnath Sengupta (Ellicott City, MD, US)
- Robert A. Burton (Columbia, MD, US)
- Barry W. Treadway (Rockville, MD, US)
- Christopher L. Rector (Jonesborough, TN, US)
- Pierre-Alain S. Auroux (Rockville, MD, US)
- Siddharth Singh (Lafayette, CA, US)
- John E. King (Ellicott City, MD, US)
Cpc classification
B01D2253/112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/28004
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D53/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/2809
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/305
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/3021
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2253/306
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/205
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2253/25
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/2808
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2253/304
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2257/708
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D53/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present invention involves the use of nanoporous carbons derived from partially or fully demetalized metal carbides in personal protection equipment for the reversible absorption/adsorption of both broad and specific targeted gases. These materials have been specifically processed to provide enhanced effective loadings against specific harmful volatile organic compounds.
Claims
1. A method of private and public protection against specific gas targets comprising the steps of: utilizing a protective filtration media, wherein said protective filtration media comprises an acid-treated carbide derived carbon; removing said specific gas targets from an atmosphere with up to 80% relative humidity; and retaining said specific gas targets with the protective filtration media.
2. The method of protection of claim 1, further comprising modifying said acid-treated carbide derived carbon for specific gas targets.
3. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media comprises a surface area greater than 1,500 m.sup.2/g.
4. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media comprises a surface area greater than 2,200 m.sup.2/g.
5. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media comprises a pore volume greater than 1 cm.sup.3/g.
6. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media comprises a pore size of less than 2 nm.
7. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media comprises a pore size of more than 2 nm and less than 50 nm.
8. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media comprises a pore size of more than 50 nm.
9. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media comprises a pore size distribution of about 0.1. to about 100 .
10. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media has a particle size of about 900 m to about 300 m.
11. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media has metal carbide at least 1% removed.
12. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein, said protective filtration media has metal carbide totally (100%) removed.
13. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein said protective filtration media has an effective loading of about 0.08 g of a target gas per 1 g of a material.
14. The method of protection of claim 2, wherein modifying said carbide derived carbon for specific gas targets further comprises the step of grinding said protective filtration media.
15. The method of protection of claim 2, wherein modifying said carbide derived carbon for specific gas targets further comprises the steps of: grinding and sieving of said carbide derived carbon; flowing halogenated gas; treating said carbide derived carbon with a vacuum annealed treatment; sieving said carbide derived carbon; treating said carbide derived carbon with an acid nitric treatment; and heating said carbide derived carbon.
16. The method of protection of claim 1, further comprising desorbing said specific gas targets from the protective filtration media.
17. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein the protective filtration media is a powder.
18. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein the protective filtration media is a fiber.
19. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein the retaining step comprises absorption.
20. The method of protection of claim 1, wherein the retaining step comprises adsorption.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention is further described with reference to the following drawings wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) Nanoporous carbons outperform other state-of-the-art sorbent materials in both adsorption rate and capacity for various volatile organic compounds. The present invention can adsorb a broad range of volatile organic compounds, including toxic industrial compounds, and a limited number of chemical warfare-agents, even under conditions of 80% relative humidity.
(9) The present invention is further defined by the following working embodiments:
(10) Referring to
(11) One embodiment of the present invention has established the relevance of using nanoporous carbide-derived carbons against difficult to capture toxic industrial compounds, and thus the capability of reducing the size of a filtration mask. In the following working example, baseline fully demetalized material as well as partially demetalized and surface functionalized materials were compared to the current widely used personal filtration medium for chemical respirators. Activated carbon impregnated with copper, Silver, Zinc, Molybdenum, and TriEthlyeneEiAmine, (ASZM-TEDA).
(12) Comparison studies between nanoporous carbons and ASZM-TEDA required that a consistent flow rate through a packed bed of material be established. Particle size distribution analysis confirmed that nanoporous carbon particles are about 350 m in diameter compared to the about 1.0 to 1.5 mm diameter activated charcoal particles of ASZM-TEDA. As a result of the size difference, packed beds of equivalent mass showed a much lower pressure drop across ASZM-TEDA packed beds as compared to the nanoporous carbon bed. Testing revealed that equivalent flow rates and pressure drops could be obtained if 200 mg of ASZM-TEDA was tested versus 30 mg of nanoporous carbon. Therefore, further testing was conducted using only 30 mg of nanoporous carbon in comparison to 200 mg of ASZM-TEDA.
(13) The test conditions for determining the breakthrough point of 40 ppm acetonitrile (ACN) at 5 L/min were devised to yield physiologically relevant data. Given that the average mass of ASZM-TEDA in a personal filtration mask is about 120 grams and that the breathing rate under moderate exercise for an average male is about 30 L/min., our test of 200 mg ASZM-TEDA and 5 L/min ACN represents a 1/600th scale model. In these conditions, one minute of test gas exposure equates to about 20 minutes of field canister use.
(14) The present invention was also tested to show that partial demetalization and surface functionalization of standard nanoporous carbon particles will improve the capture of difficult to trap molecules, such as ammonia.
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(16) Additionally, because effective desorption when using nanoporous carbons requires elevated temperatures, for example, about 325 C. over 5 minutes, use of the present invention as a filtration media is highly attractive since no analyte desorption is expected at standard operating temperatures for this embodiment.
(17) Referring to
(18) The data in
(19) Other embodiments focused on improving the functionalization of the medium. Two paths were investigated in parallel: acid treatment and impregnation by a metal salt The study on the metal salt impregnation did not lead to any significant improvement in the effective loading despite varying several parameters (salt type, salt concentration of the CDC, etc . . . ). However, unexpected results were obtained from the study on acid treatment. During the optimization of the acid treatment, it was demonstrated that the performance of a functionalized Mo.sub.2C is comparable (and in some cases better) to the values obtained with the prior art ARC material.
(20) One embodiment of this invention is the process or functionalization protocol which utilizes an acid treatment. In one working example of this embodiment, 300 mg of Mo.sub.2C was measured and put in a 40 ml vial. Then, 10 mL of nitric acid was added to the vial with Mo.sub.2C. The vial was equipped with a condenser and placed on a pre-heated heating block. After heating, Mo.sub.2C was filtered through a sintered glass funnel and then thoroughly rinsed with distilled water until the rinsing water pH becomes neutral. Mo.sub.2C was then dried under vacuum at room temperature.
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(24) Although the absolute values of the effective loading are currently in discussion, the ammonia removal capacity of a material is an intrinsic property. Consequently, if two materials are behaving similarly on one set-up, they should also perform similarly on a second test platform.
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(26) In summary, several of the embodiment materials have demonstrated effective loadings comparable to the effective loading of prior art ARC. One embodiment of the invention has demonstrated an effective loading of 0.093 g NH.sub.3/g CDC. Finally, the breakthrough times for the embodiments are significantly greater than the ones measured for prior art, ARC, demonstrating an enhanced performance over prior art materials.
(27) While the present invention has been described in connection with the preferred embodiments of the various figures, it is to be understood that other similar embodiments may be used or modifications and additions may be made to the described embodiment for performing the same function of the present invention without deviating therefrom. Therefore, the present invention should not be limited to any single embodiment, but rather construed in breadth and scope in accordance with the recitation of the appended claims.