Abstract: | Permeability data are reported for carbon dioxide in Lexan polycarbonate at 35°C. Measurements were made for both pure carbon dioxide and for a mixed feed consisting of carbon dioxide with a 117.8-torr (0.155-atm) Partial pressure of isopentane. The effects of varying upstream CO2 driving pressure from 1 up to 20 atm were studied. The permeability to CO2 is reduced significantly in the presence of isopentane; however, the fractional depression of the CO2 permeability due to the isopentane at low driving pressures is much more significant than at high CO2 driving pressures. The well-known pressure dependence of carbon dioxide permeabilities in glassy polymers, therefore, is largely diminished by introducing isopentane to the pure carbon dioxide feed. These observations are consistent with a model for transport in glassy polymers which explains the observed trends in terms of competition between the two penetrants for microvoid sorption sites existing in the non-equilibrium glassy polymer. Exclusion of carbon dioxide from microvoid sorption sites by the more condensable isopentane preempts transport through the microvoid regions, resulting in the observed depression of the CO2 permeability. |