Experimental Evaluation of a Hollow Fiber Gas Exchange for Partial Extracorporeal CO2 Removal

Author(s):  
A. Bionda ◽  
R. Palla ◽  
V. Panichi ◽  
M. Fini ◽  
M. Ciccardi ◽  
...  
1994 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. 1716-1730 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. C. Niranjan ◽  
J. W. Clark ◽  
K. Y. San ◽  
J. B. Zwischenberger ◽  
A. Bidani

A mathematical model of an intravascular hollow-fiber gas-exchange device, called IVOX, has been developed using a Krogh cylinder-like approach with a repeating unit structure comprised of a single fiber with gas flowing through its lumen surrounded by a coaxial cylinder of blood flowing in the opposite direction. Species mass balances on O2 and CO2 result in a nonlinear coupled set of convective-diffusion parabolic partial differential equations that are solved numerically using an alternating-direction implicit finite-difference method. Computed results indicated the presence of a large resistance to gas transport on the external (blood) side of the hollow-fiber exchanger. Increasing gas flow through the device favored CO2 removal from but not O2 addition to blood. Increasing blood flow over the device favored both CO2 removal as well as O2 addition. The rate of CO2 removal increased linearly with the transmural PCO2 gradient imposed across the device. The effect of fiber crimping on blood phase mass transfer resistance was evaluated indirectly by varying species blood diffusivity. Computed results indicated that CO2 excretion by IVOX can be significantly enhanced with improved bulk mixing of vena caval blood around the IVOX fibers.


Critical Care ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. P274
Author(s):  
A Hermann ◽  
K Riss ◽  
P Schellongowski ◽  
A Bojic ◽  
P Wohlfarth ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 41 (10) ◽  
pp. 1773-1780 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Hermann ◽  
Katharina Riss ◽  
Peter Schellongowski ◽  
Andja Bojic ◽  
Philipp Wohlfarth ◽  
...  

Separations ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (8) ◽  
pp. 113
Author(s):  
Nawaf Alshammari ◽  
Meshari Alazmi ◽  
Vajid Nettoor Veettil

Membranes for use in high gas exchange lung applications are riddled with fouling. The goal of this research is to create a membrane that can function in an artificial lung until the actual lung becomes available for the patient. The design of the artificial lung is based on new hollow fiber membranes (HFMs), due to which the current devices have short and limited periods of low fouling. By successfully modifying membranes with attached peptoids, low fouling can be achieved for longer periods of time. Hydrophilic modification of porous polysulfone (PSF) membranes can be achieved gradually by polydopamine (PSU-PDA) and peptoid (PSU-PDA-NMEG5). Polysulfone (PSU-BSA-35Mg), polysulfone polydopamine (PSUPDA-BSA-35Mg) and polysulfone polydopamine peptoid (PSU-PDA-NMEG5-BSA35Mg) were tested by potting into the new design of gas exchange modules. Both surfaces of the modified membranes were found to be highly resistant to protein fouling permanently. The use of different peptoids can facilitate optimization of the low fouling on the membrane surface, thereby allowing membranes to be run for significantly longer time periods than has been currently achieved.


Membranes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 496
Author(s):  
Sayali Ramdas Chavan ◽  
Patrick Perré ◽  
Victor Pozzobon ◽  
Julien Lemaire

Recently, membrane contactors have gained more popularity in the field of CO2 removal; however, achieving high purity and competitive recovery for poor soluble gas (H2, N2, or CH4) remains elusive. Hence, a novel process for CO2 removal from a mixture of gases using hollow fiber membrane contactors is investigated theoretically and experimentally. A theoretical model is constructed to show that the dissolved residual CO2 hinders the capacity of the absorbent when it is regenerated. This model, backed up by experimental investigation, proves that achieving a purity > 99% without consuming excessive chemicals or energy remains challenging in a closed-loop system. As a solution, a novel strategy is proposed: the pH Swing Absorption which consists of manipulating the acido–basic equilibrium of CO2 in the absorption and desorption stages by injecting moderate acid and base amount. It aims at decreasing CO2 residual content in the regenerated absorbent, by converting CO2 into its ionic counterparts (HCO3− or CO32−) before absorption and improving CO2 degassing before desorption. Therefore, this strategy unlocks the theoretical limitation due to equilibrium with CO2 residual content in the absorbent and increases considerably the maximum achievable purity. Results also show the dependency of the performance on operating conditions such as total gas pressure and liquid flowrate. For N2/CO2 mixture, this process achieved a nitrogen purity of 99.97% with a N2 recovery rate of 94.13%. Similarly, for H2/CO2 mixture, a maximum H2 purity of 99.96% and recovery rate of 93.96% was obtained using this process. Moreover, the proposed patented process could potentially reduce energy or chemicals consumption.


2013 ◽  
Vol 52 (50) ◽  
pp. 18059-18070 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhen Wang ◽  
Mengxiang Fang ◽  
Hai Yu ◽  
Chiao-Chien Wei ◽  
Zhongyang Luo

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