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arxiv: 1907.11923 · v1 · pith:HZLOJHPFnew · submitted 2019-07-27 · ⚛️ physics.app-ph · cond-mat.mtrl-sci

High CO2-tolerance oxygen permeation dual-phase membranes Ce0.9Pr0.1O2-{δ}-Pr0.6Sr0.4Fe0.8Al0.2O3-{δ}

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 14:39 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ physics.app-ph cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords oxygen permeation membranedual-phase compositeCO2 toleranceCe0.9Pr0.1O2Pr0.6Sr0.4Fe0.8Al0.2O3oxygen transportcarbon capture
0
0 comments X

The pith

The 60CPO-40PSFAO dual-phase membrane reaches 1.03 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} oxygen flux at 1000 °C and stays phase-stable for over 100 hours in air/CO2.

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

The authors set out to create composite oxygen-transport membranes that combine high permeability with resistance to CO2, a key barrier for use in carbon-capture processes. They prepared three ratios of Ce0.9Pr0.1O2-δ (CPO) and Pr0.6Sr0.4Fe0.8Al0.2O3-δ (PSFAO) by a modified Pechini route and measured oxygen permeation in air/He together with in-situ XRD stability in CO2. The 60 wt.% CPO composition delivered the highest flux while preserving its crystal structure after prolonged exposure to CO2 at 1000 °C. This combination meets the practical flux threshold of 1 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} and demonstrates the material could supply oxygen inside CO2-capture loops without rapid degradation.

Core claim

The optimal 60CPO-40PSFAO composite membrane exhibits an oxygen permeation flux of 1.03 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} at 1000 °C in air/He and maintains excellent phase stability after operating for over 100 h at air/CO2 condition at 1000 °C.

What carries the argument

The dual-phase microstructure formed by fluorite-type CPO and perovskite-type PSFAO grains, with the 60:40 weight ratio chosen to balance ionic conductivity, electronic conductivity, and chemical resistance to CO2.

If this is right

  • The membrane satisfies the minimum industrial flux requirement and can therefore be considered for oxygen supply modules in oxy-fuel or pre-combustion capture systems.
  • Its unchanged XRD pattern after 100 hours in CO2 at 1000 °C indicates that the two phases do not react with each other or with CO2 under the tested conditions.
  • Lower-performing 50CPO and 75CPO ratios show that the 60:40 balance is required to reach both high flux and CO2 tolerance simultaneously.
  • Uncoated 0.33 mm thick disks already exceed the target flux, so further surface activation may not be necessary for initial device prototypes.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • If the material proves stable under pressure gradients typical of membrane modules, it could lower the energy penalty of oxygen separation in carbon-capture plants.
  • The same dual-phase design might be adapted for other high-temperature electrochemical devices such as solid-oxide fuel cells or electrolyzers that also encounter CO2.
  • Longer-term tests with realistic impurity levels would be the direct next measurement to confirm or refute industrial readiness.
  • Reducing membrane thickness below 0.33 mm while retaining mechanical integrity would further increase flux and reduce required surface area.

Load-bearing premise

Laboratory tests in clean air/CO2 or air/He at 1000 °C for 100 hours represent the conditions the membrane will face in an industrial CO2-capture plant.

What would settle it

A drop in oxygen flux below 1 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} or the appearance of new diffraction peaks indicating phase decomposition when the membrane is run for 500 hours in a real flue-gas stream containing SO2, H2O, and particulates.

read the original abstract

High stability and oxygen permeability are two prominent requirements for the oxygen transport membrane candidates used as industrialization. Herein, we report several composite membranes based on xwt.%Ce0.9Pr0.1O2(CPO)-(100-x)wt.%Pr0.6Sr0.4Fe0.8Al0.2O3(PSFAO) (x = 50, 60 and 75) prepared via a modified Pechini method. Oxygen permeability test reveals that the 60CPO-40PSFAO composition exhibits the highest oxygen permeability. The oxygen permeation flux through the optimal uncoated 0.33 mm-thickness 60CPO-40PSFAO composite can reach 1.03 mL cm-2 min-1 (over the general requirement value of 1 mL cm-2 min-1) in air/He atmosphere at 1000 {\deg}C. In situ XRD performance confirms the optimal 60CPO-40PSFAO sample shows excellent stability in CO2-containing atmospheres. The 60CPO-40PSFAO membrane still exhibits simultaneously excellent oxygen permeability and phase stability after operating for over 100 h at air/CO2 condition at 1000 {\deg}C, which further indicates that the 60CPO-40PSFAO composite is likely to be used for oxygen supply in CO2 capture

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 / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript reports synthesis via modified Pechini method of dual-phase membranes x wt.% Ce0.9Pr0.1O2-δ-(100-x) wt.% Pr0.6Sr0.4Fe0.8Al0.2O3-δ (x=50,60,75). The 60CPO-40PSFAO composition is identified as optimal, delivering an oxygen permeation flux of 1.03 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} at 1000 °C in air/He through a 0.33 mm uncoated membrane (exceeding the 1 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} benchmark) while exhibiting phase stability by in situ XRD after >100 h operation in air/CO2 at 1000 °C, leading to the conclusion that the material is likely suitable for oxygen supply in CO2 capture.

Significance. If the reported flux value and 100 h stability hold, the work supplies a concrete dual-phase candidate that satisfies the standard 1 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} threshold and demonstrates short-term CO2 tolerance, adding to the library of high-temperature oxygen-transport membranes for carbon-capture applications.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The assertion that the 60CPO-40PSFAO composite 'is likely to be used for oxygen supply in CO2 capture' is not supported by the presented evidence, which is restricted to simplified air/He and air/CO2 laboratory tests at 1000 °C; no results address flue-gas impurities, transmembrane pressure differences, or extended operation beyond 100 h.
  2. [Abstract] Abstract: The central performance value of 1.03 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} is stated without error bars, number of replicates, raw data, or exclusion criteria, preventing independent verification of the claim that the flux exceeds the general requirement of 1 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1}.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The strings 'CPO' and 'PSFAO' are introduced without an explicit first-use definition of the full chemical formulas, and the LaTeX artifacts '{-δ}' and '{'deg}C' should be rendered as δ and °C.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the constructive comments, which help improve the clarity and accuracy of our manuscript. We address each major comment below and will make the corresponding revisions to the abstract and experimental details.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The assertion that the 60CPO-40PSFAO composite 'is likely to be used for oxygen supply in CO2 capture' is not supported by the presented evidence, which is restricted to simplified air/He and air/CO2 laboratory tests at 1000 °C; no results address flue-gas impurities, transmembrane pressure differences, or extended operation beyond 100 h.

    Authors: We agree that the original phrasing implies a level of readiness not fully demonstrated by the laboratory-scale tests. The data establish competitive flux and phase stability under controlled air/CO2 conditions for >100 h, which are standard initial benchmarks for such materials. We will revise the abstract to state that the composite 'shows promise for oxygen supply in CO2 capture applications' to better reflect the scope of the evidence. No new experiments on impurities or extended operation are added, as they fall outside the present study. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The central performance value of 1.03 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} is stated without error bars, number of replicates, raw data, or exclusion criteria, preventing independent verification of the claim that the flux exceeds the general requirement of 1 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1}.

    Authors: This observation is correct; the manuscript as submitted lacks explicit reporting of measurement variability. In the revised version we will include error bars derived from at least three independent membrane samples, state the typical standard deviation, and add a brief description of the permeation measurement protocol and data acceptance criteria in the experimental section. The reported 1.03 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} value will be presented as the mean that exceeds the 1 mL cm^{-2} min^{-1} benchmark within the observed uncertainty. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: direct experimental report of measured flux and stability

full rationale

The paper is a materials synthesis and characterization study reporting oxygen permeation fluxes and phase stability from direct laboratory measurements (Pechini method preparation, permeation tests in air/He and air/CO2, in situ XRD). No equations, fitted parameters, derivations, predictions, or self-citations appear in the provided abstract or described content that reduce any claim to prior inputs by construction. The industrial applicability statement is an interpretive conclusion, not a derived result. This is self-contained experimental evidence with no load-bearing theoretical chain.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper is an experimental materials study reporting synthesis and permeation measurements; it introduces no free parameters, mathematical axioms, or invented physical entities.

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Reference graph

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