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arxiv: 1907.01772 · v1 · pith:S7FMVTYUnew · submitted 2019-07-03 · ⚛️ physics.app-ph · cond-mat.mtrl-sci

High-flux dual-phase percolation membrane for oxygen separation

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 10:04 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ physics.app-ph cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords dual-phase membraneoxygen permeationCO2 stabilitycomposite materialperovskitefluoriteoxygen separationCa doping
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The pith

The 60CPO-40PCFO dual-phase composite shows the highest oxygen permeability among tested materials, reaching 1.00 mL cm-2 min-1 flux at 1000°C under air/He.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper fabricates three weight-ratio composites of Ce0.9Pr0.1O2-δ with Pr0.6Ca0.4FeO3-δ and measures their crystal structures, oxygen permeation rates, and stability under CO2 exposure. The 60-40 composition stands out with the reported fluxes of 1.00 mL cm-2 min-1 in air/He and 0.62 mL cm-2 min-1 in air/CO2 for 0.3 mm thick membranes at 1000°C after surface coating, plus confirmed structural integrity via in situ XRD. A sympathetic reader would care because the design avoids cobalt and strontium, potentially lowering cost and improving durability for industrial oxygen separation where CO2 tolerance matters.

Core claim

The composition of 60wt.%Ce0.9Pr0.1O2-δ-40wt.%Pr0.6Ca0.4FeO3-δ possesses the highest oxygen permeability among three studied composites. At 1000°C, the oxygen permeation fluxes through the 0.3 mm-thickness 60CPO-40PCFO membranes after porous La0.6Sr0.4CoO3-δ reach 1.00 mL cm-2 min-1 and 0.62 mL cm-2 min-1 under air/He and air/CO2 gradients, respectively. In situ XRD results demonstrate that the 60CPO-40PCFO sample displays perfect structural stability in air as well as CO2-containing atmosphere.

What carries the argument

The dual-phase percolation structure in the 60CPO-40PCFO composite, where the fluorite and perovskite phases enable simultaneous oxygen-ion and electronic transport across the membrane thickness.

If this is right

  • The membrane can sustain oxygen transport under CO2 gradients without immediate structural failure.
  • Eliminating cobalt and strontium cuts material expense and reduces risk of carbonate formation.
  • The measured flux levels indicate the composite could support high-temperature industrial oxygen separation processes.
  • Surface modification with a porous coating increases the effective permeation rate in these dual-phase materials.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If the reported stability extends to dynamic gas-flow conditions, the material could pair with carbon-capture systems that produce CO2-rich streams.
  • Adjusting the exact Pr or Ca fractions within the same two-phase system might produce still-higher fluxes without adding new elements.
  • Post-operation microscopy on membranes run for weeks rather than hours would provide a direct check on whether XRD snapshots capture all degradation paths.

Load-bearing premise

Short-term in situ XRD observations of structural stability in a static CO2-containing atmosphere are enough to predict reliable long-term performance under flowing gas and temperature-gradient conditions during actual oxygen permeation.

What would settle it

A measurable drop in oxygen flux below the reported values or formation of new carbonate phases after several hundred hours of continuous permeation testing at 1000°C under an air/CO2 gradient would show the stability claim does not hold.

read the original abstract

A series of composites based on (100-x)wt.%Ce0.9Pr0.1O2-{\delta}-xwt.%Pr0.6Ca0.4FeO3-{\delta} (x = 25, 40 and 50) doped with the cheap and abundant alkaline earth metal Ca2+ at the A-site has been successfully designed and fabricated. The crystal structure, oxygen permeability, phase and CO2 stability were evaluated. The composition of 60wt.%Ce0.9Pr0.1O2-{\delta}-40wt.%Pr0.6Ca0.4FeO3-{\delta}(60CPO-40PCFO) possesses the highest oxygen permeability among three studied composites. At 1000 oC, the oxygen permeation fluxes through the 0.3 mm-thickness 60CPO-40PCFO membranes after porous La0.6Sr0.4CoO3-{\delta} each to 1.00 mL cm-2 min-1 and 0.62 mL cm-2 min-1 under air/He and air/CO2 gradients, respectively. In situ XRD results demonstrated that the 60CPO-40PCFO sample displayed a perfect structural stability in air as well as CO2-containing atmosphere. Thus, low-cost, Co-free and Sr-free 60CPO-40PCFO has high CO2 stability and is economical and environmental friendly since the expensive and volatile element Co was replaced by Fe and Sr was waived since it easily forms carbonates.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript reports synthesis of dual-phase composites (100-x)wt.% Ce0.9Pr0.1O2-δ - x wt.% Pr0.6Ca0.4FeO3-δ (x=25,40,50) for oxygen separation membranes. The 60CPO-40PCFO composition is identified as optimal, with oxygen permeation fluxes through 0.3 mm thick membranes (porous LSC coated) reaching 1.00 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} under air/He and 0.62 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} under air/CO2 at 1000°C. In situ XRD is presented to demonstrate structural stability in air and CO2-containing atmospheres, with the material positioned as a low-cost, Co-free, Sr-free option with high CO2 tolerance.

Significance. If the flux values and long-term stability hold, the work is significant for advancing economical dual-phase oxygen transport membranes suitable for CO2-containing environments such as oxy-fuel combustion. The reported fluxes are competitive for thin membranes, the Ca doping strategy uses abundant elements, and the explicit avoidance of Co and Sr addresses cost and carbonate-formation issues. The in situ XRD approach provides direct crystallographic evidence, which is a methodological strength.

major comments (2)
  1. [stability evaluation / in situ XRD results] The central claim of 'high CO2 stability' for practical use (abstract and stability evaluation section) rests on in situ XRD data showing no phase decomposition in CO2 atmospheres. This is insufficient to establish sustained permeation performance, as XRD cannot detect slow surface carbonate formation, grain-boundary reactions, or flux decay under gas flow and pO2 gradients present during actual air/CO2 permeation testing. No time-dependent permeation flux data under the air/CO2 gradient is reported to corroborate the single-point value of 0.62 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1}.
  2. [oxygen permeability evaluation] The statement that 60CPO-40PCFO 'possesses the highest oxygen permeability among three studied composites' (abstract and oxygen permeability section) is presented without tabulated or graphed flux values, error bars, or replicate counts for the x=25 and x=50 compositions. This prevents quantitative assessment of whether the reported superiority is statistically meaningful or within experimental uncertainty.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract contains unclear phrasing: 'after porous La0.6Sr0.4CoO3-δ each to 1.00' should be revised for clarity (likely intended as 'reach').
  2. [Abstract] The non-stoichiometry symbol appears as '{-δ}' (LaTeX artifact) in the abstract; ensure consistent rendering of δ throughout the manuscript and figures.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 1 unresolved

We thank the referee for the constructive comments, which help clarify the scope of our claims. We respond point-by-point below, indicating revisions where appropriate.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [stability evaluation / in situ XRD results] The central claim of 'high CO2 stability' for practical use (abstract and stability evaluation section) rests on in situ XRD data showing no phase decomposition in CO2 atmospheres. This is insufficient to establish sustained permeation performance, as XRD cannot detect slow surface carbonate formation, grain-boundary reactions, or flux decay under gas flow and pO2 gradients present during actual air/CO2 permeation testing. No time-dependent permeation flux data under the air/CO2 gradient is reported to corroborate the single-point value of 0.62 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1}.

    Authors: We agree that in situ XRD provides crystallographic evidence of phase stability but does not address possible slow surface or grain-boundary reactions under flowing gas and pO2 gradients. The air/CO2 flux value of 0.62 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} is a single-point measurement. No time-dependent permeation data under air/CO2 were collected. We will revise the abstract and stability section to replace 'high CO2 stability' with 'structural stability in CO2-containing atmospheres' and explicitly note the limitations of the XRD characterization. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [oxygen permeability evaluation] The statement that 60CPO-40PCFO 'possesses the highest oxygen permeability among three studied composites' (abstract and oxygen permeability section) is presented without tabulated or graphed flux values, error bars, or replicate counts for the x=25 and x=50 compositions. This prevents quantitative assessment of whether the reported superiority is statistically meaningful or within experimental uncertainty.

    Authors: Flux data for all three compositions (x=25, 40, 50) appear in Figure 5, but we accept that error bars, replicate counts, and a summary table are missing. We will add a table of oxygen permeation fluxes at selected temperatures for the three compositions, including standard deviations from replicate measurements, to allow direct quantitative comparison. revision: yes

standing simulated objections not resolved
  • No time-dependent permeation flux data under the air/CO2 gradient are available from the study.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: purely experimental measurements with no derivations or self-referential steps

full rationale

The paper reports synthesis of composites, in situ XRD for phase stability, and direct experimental measurements of oxygen permeation fluxes (e.g., 1.00 and 0.62 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} at 1000 °C). No equations, models, fitted parameters presented as predictions, or derivation chains exist. Central claims rest on empirical data collection rather than any reduction to inputs by construction, self-citation load-bearing, or ansatz smuggling. This matches the default case of a self-contained experimental report with no mathematical content that could create circularity.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

This is an experimental materials report; the claims rest on standard domain assumptions for ceramic synthesis and gas permeation testing rather than new free parameters, axioms, or entities.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Standard materials science assumptions regarding phase stability, ionic/electronic conductivity in dual-phase composites, and conventional gas permeation measurement techniques apply.
    The abstract invokes crystal structure, oxygen permeability, phase, and CO2 stability evaluation without indicating any non-standard methods or deviations from established practice.

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discussion (0)

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Reference graph

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