Loading…

Thermal transpiration in mixed cellulose ester membranes: Enabling miniature, motionless gas pumps

Mesoporous polymers provide dense arrays of narrow channels that maintain high Knudsen numbers at atmospheric pressure. A temperature gradient results in thermal transpiration gas flow from the cold end to the hot end. Motionless gas pumps are described. [Display omitted] ► Mesoporous polymer materi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Microporous and mesoporous materials 2011-07, Vol.142 (2), p.535-541
Main Authors: Gupta, Naveen K., Gianchandani, Yogesh B.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Mesoporous polymers provide dense arrays of narrow channels that maintain high Knudsen numbers at atmospheric pressure. A temperature gradient results in thermal transpiration gas flow from the cold end to the hot end. Motionless gas pumps are described. [Display omitted] ► Mesoporous polymer materials enable motionless gas pumps at chip-scale. ► Highest recorded flow rates for transpiration-based Knudsen pumps. ► Enable micro-gas chromatography and other lab-on-chip applications. ► Operated for >6000 h without failure. ► Semi-analytical model identifies non-idealities. In this paper, we introduce the use of thin mesoporous mixed cellulose ester (polymer) membranes as the enabling element of miniature, motionless gas pumps. The pores within these membranes serve as channels that constrain gas molecules to the free molecular or transitional gas flow regimes. A temperature gradient across the membranes causes a transpiration based gas flow from the cold side to the hot side; this type of flow is the basis of Knudsen pumps. Gas flow characteristics and vacuum generation capabilities of polymer membranes with three different pore-sizes are reported. In this group, membranes with 25 nm pore-size provide superior functionality. For an input power of 1.4 W/cm 2, Knudsen pump test structures based on this membrane material provide a typical gas flow rate of ≈0.93 sccm/cm 2 in the absence of pressure load. The transient pressure response is used to quantify various non-idealities. Experiments suggest that these polymer membranes are relatively defect-free as compared to bulk microporous ceramics that were previously evaluated for similar applications. In longevity tests performed to date, a polymer pump has operated continuously for ≈6000 h without significant deterioration in its performance.
ISSN:1387-1811
1873-3093
DOI:10.1016/j.micromeso.2010.12.042