Ceramic membranes are a type of artificial membranes made from inorganic materials (such as alumina, titanium dioxide, zirconia oxides, silicon carbide or some glassy materials). They are used in membrane operations for liquid filtration.
By contrast with polymeric membranes, they can be used in separations where aggressive media (acids, strong solvents) are present. They also have excellent thermal stability which makes them usable in high-temperature membrane operations.
Like polymeric membranes, they are either dense or porous.
Researchers have studied ceramic membranes for potential applications in wastewater treatment, gas separation, and Membrane reactor. Ceramic membranes typically last longer than polymeric membranes which are more commonly used for these applications. Currently ceramic membranes have not seen widespread usage mainly due to their high cost of production.
Configurations include tubular cross flow and dead-end membranes as well as flat sheet membranes.
An example of an amorphous membrane is the silica membrane.
An example of a highly porous membrane is the type made of silicon carbide.
Porous ceramic membranes are typically manufactured through a slip coating-sintering process. In this process a support is initially made by sintering particles of a ceramic material into a mold with a binding agent. The surface of this support is then coated in a solution of finer ceramic particles and a polymeric binder. This coating is then sintered to form a porous layer of the membrane. This process can then be repeated to form new layers that are typically formed with smaller part ceramic particles. This repeated process with increasingly small particles creates an Anisotropy membrane.
While most of the ceramic membrane manufacturers produce the membranes of carriers and membrane layers of alumina oxide, titanium oxide and zirconia oxide only a few manufacturers work with silicon carbide. Silicon carbide requires higher sintering temperatures (>2000 °C) compared to oxide based membranes (1200-1600 °C). The pioneers in developing and commercializing silicon carbide membranes are the Danish company Liqtech, CeraMem (Alsys group) and American company Kemco Systems.
|
|