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Research Trend of Crystalline Porous Materials for Hydrogen Isotope Separation via Kinetic Quantum Sieving

Authors
Lee, SeuljiOh, Hyunchul
Issue Date
Aug-2021
Publisher
MATERIALS RESEARCH SOC KOREA
Keywords
hydrogen; deuterium; isotope separation; nanoporous materials; kinetic quantum sieving
Citation
KOREAN JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH, v.31, no.8, pp 465 - 470
Pages
6
Indexed
SCOPUS
ESCI
KCI
Journal Title
KOREAN JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH
Volume
31
Number
8
Start Page
465
End Page
470
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/72947
DOI
10.3740/MRSK.2021.31.8.465
ISSN
1225-0562
2287-7258
Abstract
Deuterium is a crucial clean energy source required for nuclear fusion and is a future resource needed in various industries and scientific fields. However, it is not easy to enrich deuterium because the proportion of deuterium in the hydrogen mixture is scarce, at approximately 0.016 %. Furthermore, the physical and chemical properties of the hydrogen mixture and deuterium are very similar. Therefore, the efficient separation of deuterium from hydrogen mixtures is often a significant challenge when using modern separation technologies. Recently, to effectively separate deuterium, studies utilizing the 'Kinetic Quantum Sieving Effect (KQS)' of porous materials are increasing. Therefore, in this review, two different strategies have been discussed for improving KQS efficiency for hydrogen isotope separation performance using nanoporous materials. One is the gating effect, which precisely controls the aperture locally by adjusting the temperature and pressure. The second is the breathing phenomenon, utilizing the volume change of the structure from closed system to open system. It has been reported that efficient hydrogen isotope separation is possible using these two methods, and each of these effects is described in detail in this review. In addition, a specific-isotope responsive system (e.g., 2nd breathing effect in MIL-53) has recently been discovered and is described here as well.
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