Permeation of "Hydromer" Film: An Elastomeric Hydrogen-Capturing Biopolymer.
Author(s) -
Richard A. Karnesky,
Raymond W. Friddle,
Josh A. Whaley,
Geoffrey B. Smith
Publication year - 2015
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1234933
Subject(s) - permeation , polymer , biopolymer , hydrogen , materials science , elastomer , chemical engineering , gravimetric analysis , deuterium , permeability (electromagnetism) , coating , thermal resistance , polymer chemistry , thermal , composite material , chemistry , organic chemistry , membrane , thermodynamics , nuclear physics , biochemistry , physics , engineering
This report analyzes the permeation resistance of a novel and proprietary polymer coating for hydrogen isotope resistance that was developed by New Mexico State University. Thermal gravimetric analysis and thermal desoprtion spectroscopy show the polymer is stable thermally to approximately 250 deg C. Deuterium gas-driven permeation experiments were conducted at Sandia to explore early evidence (obtained using Brunauer - Emmett - Teller) of the polymer's strong resistance to hydrogen. With a relatively small amount of the polymer in solution (0.15%), a decrease in diffusion by a factor of 2 is observed at 100 and 150 deg C. While there was very little reduction in permeability, the preliminary findings reported here are meant to demonstrate the sensitivity of Sandia's permeation measurements and are intended to motivate the future exploration of thicker barriers with greater polymer coverage.
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