1. Introduction
Currently, hydrogen energy, a clean and carbon-free secondary energy source, has attracted considerable attention. Large-scale utilization of hydrogen energy largely depends on convenient and efficient transportation and distribution. Blending hydrogen into existing natural gas pipelines represents a practical approach for hydrogen transportation [
1]. Although hydrogen-enriched natural gas can be directly combusted at end-use points [
2], hydrogen must be separated and purified from the mixture before it can be used in non-combustion applications such as fuel cells [
3], metallurgical reduction [
4], large-scale green hydrogen storage [
5], and the utilization of clean hydrogen to produce alternative fuels [
6]. Currently, predominant hydrogen separation and purification technologies, including pressure swing adsorption (PSA) [
7], cryogenic distillation [
8], metal hydride separation [
9], and membrane separation [
10], generally have been widely developed for hydrogen separation and purification applications [
11]. In parallel with these technologies, gas separation based on the thermal transpiration effect has emerged as a potential alternative approach [
12]. The process is driven by temperature gradients and may be associated with low-grade heat sources such as waste heat or solar thermal energy [
13].
In microchannels (or micropores), when the characteristic dimension of the microchannel is comparable to or smaller than the mean free path of gas molecules with a tangential temperature gradient along the wall, gas molecules near the wall spontaneously migrate from the cold end toward the hot end. This phenomenon of temperature-driven flow in rarefied gas is known as the thermal transpiration effect [
14]. If the thermal transpiration effect occurs in a gas mixture, different gas components show distinct molecular velocities under the same operating conditions due to their different mean free paths. Macroscopically, this results in the separation of the mixture components [
15].
The thermal transpiration effect has therefore been investigated as a potential mechanism for gas mixture separation in microchannels. Accordingly, extensive research has been conducted in this area. Takata et al. [
16] first explored the feasibility of gas separation by a Knudsen pump. They established a hydrodynamic model based on kinetic theory, and confirmed its effectiveness by numerical simulations. Subsequently, using the Knudsen pump as a prototype, various configurations of thermal-transpiration-effect-based gas separators have been developed. Sugimoto et al. [
17] proposed a parallel counterflow separator model and analyzed its separation performance by the Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method. Their results demonstrated that the lighter-molecular-weight component of a gas mixture is largely enriched downstream of the hot channel, and this counterflow configuration achieves higher separation than co-flow designs at the same temperature difference. While separation performance improves with an increasing temperature difference, the capacity of a single-stage separator remains limited. Nakaye et al. [
18] employed the “pipenet method” to simulate a counterflow separator, followed by experimental validation. Using a prototype that was 110 μm-thick and 3 × 3 cm in size, they increased the helium mole concentration in a He-Ar mixture by 15% at a 45 K temperature difference.
The concept of molecular exchange flow, first defined by Sugimoto and Hibino [
17], refers to a special flow phenomenon in microchannels induced jointly by thermal transpiration and pressure-driven flow, where under appropriate pressure and temperature gradients the lighter-molecular-weight component flows from the cold channel to the hot channel while the same number of heavier-molecular-weight component molecules flow in the opposite direction. Subsequently, Kosyanchuk et al. [
19] numerically studied the gas separator using a multi-scale approach and demonstrated that it can achieve nearly 100% purity with a temperature difference of only 30 K. Meng et al. [
20] systematically studied the construction conditions and influencing factors for negative/ideal/positive molecular exchange flows, implying that molecular exchange flow could intensify gas separation since it realizes the opposite flow between lighter-molecular-weight and heavier-molecular-weight components. In contrast to this mechanism, the thermal transpiration effect often leads to differences in the flow speed of different components in a gas mixture without requiring them to flow in opposite directions. Furthermore, Su et al. [
21] proposed a novel gas separator based on molecular exchange flow, and investigated the influences of temperature difference, Knudsen number, and inlet gas velocity on energy use and thermal efficiency. However, gas separators based on molecular exchange flow face inherent limitations in processing capacity due to the need for precise coupling between reverse pressure and temperature gradients. This complicates high-throughput operation and limits operational flexibility. By contrast, separation relying solely on the thermal transpiration effect induced only by a temperature gradient offers greater robustness for various scenarios.
These studies provide a useful basis for the practical application of the thermal transpiration effect in gas separation. It is noteworthy that gas separators based on the thermal transpiration effect are typical microfluidic devices, whose working principles and internal flow characteristics are closely related to gas rarefaction effects. According to the Knudsen number (
Kn), the flow regime can be divided into the continuum flow regime (
Kn < 0.01), the slip flow regime (0.01 <
Kn < 0.1), the transition flow regime (0.1 <
Kn < 10), and the free molecular flow regime (
Kn > 10) [
22]. The thermal transpiration effect can occur in the last three non-continuum flow regimes, with its intensity progressively increasing from the slip flow regime to the transition flow regime and further to the free molecular flow regime. Correspondingly, the gas separation performance becomes more pronounced. However, the most significant challenge is the geometrically progressive decline in gas flow rate [
23]. Therefore, applying the thermal transpiration effect to gas separation in practical applications requires a careful balance between separation efficiency and processing capacity. Depending on the specific scenario, the thermal transpiration effect in each of the three non-continuum flow regimes holds potential applicability. Given that separating hydrogen from hydrogen-enriched natural gas typically involves processing large gas volumes, CH
4-H
2 separation in the slip flow regime is of practical relevance, because this regime allows the thermal transpiration effect to be utilized while avoiding excessive pressure drops and the severe reduction in gas flow rate associated with higher rarefaction regimes [
24]. Moreover, modular and parallel integration of micro-separation units may offer a route for increasing the overall processing capacity of such devices [
25,
26].
Previous studies have mainly focused on molecular exchange flow-based gas separation under relatively restrictive operating conditions. However, the separation characteristics induced by the thermal transpiration effect itself and the influence of component flow characteristics on separation performance require further clarification. For the separation of hydrogen from hydrogen-enriched natural gas, a mathematical model for the thermal-transpiration-effect-based circulating-flow separator of CH
4-H
2 mixtures, following the work by Su et al. [
21], is proposed to describe the flow characteristics within both the continuum and slip flow regimes. Unlike conventional molecular exchange flow models based on flux decomposition, where separation is evaluated from net fluxes obtained from the decomposition of thermal transpiration and Poiseuille flow contributions in the microchannel, the present model directly solves the velocity fields of the two gas components and determines the separation from their velocity differences. Based on this model, the flow characteristics of a CH
4-H
2 mixture in the separator are analyzed, and the changes in separation performance with different influencing factors are subsequently investigated. This study aims primarily to clarify the physical mechanism of thermal-transpiration-induced separation, supported by the proposed component-resolved model. The findings may provide preliminary guidance for the application of such gas separators in hydrogen recovery from hydrogen-enriched natural gas.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Effect of Channel F Temperature TF on Separator Performance
The temperature difference between the two ends of the microchannel connecting the main channels F and R is one of the key factors governing hydrogen separation. Beyond the above-specified structural parameters of the separator, the inlet gas velocity U0 was fixed at 1 m/s, while the microchannel diameter d was fixed at 4 μm. On this basis, the effect of channel F temperature TF on hydrogen separation was systematically examined.
Referring to
Figure 4, an obvious hydrogen separation phenomenon can be observed especially at higher channel F temperature
TF, with hydrogen enriched in the component enrichment zone. The hydrogen mole fraction increases as the temperature difference between channels F and R increases. When channel F temperatures
TF are set to 325 K, 350 K, 375 K, and 400 K, the corresponding average hydrogen mole fractions
are 0.248, 0.321, 0.381, and 0.429, respectively. It should be noted that these observations are valid for the investigated operating conditions, in which
TR was fixed at 300 K while
TF varied from 325 K to 400 K. The influence of different absolute temperature levels was not considered in the present study.
As illustrated in
Figure 5a, the tangential velocity
v(
y) of both components along the axes of the microchannels exhibits a parabolic profile with a maximum at the microchannel wall and a minimum at the microchannel center. This distribution results from the temperature gradient induced by the temperature difference between the two ends of the microchannel. The thermal transpiration effect drives gas molecules near the wall to move from the cold end toward the hot end, forming a thermal transpiration flow. Meanwhile, the velocity in the microchannel center remains influenced by the pressure gradient, which drives a Poiseuille flow. The coupling of these two flow mechanisms leads to the observed parabolic tangential velocity profile. As the channel F temperature
TF increases, the thermal transpiration effect strengthens, thereby increasing the tangential velocities of both components. Compared with methane, hydrogen shows a faster increase in tangential velocity. Consequently, the increase in the velocity difference between the two components leads to a corresponding rise in the hydrogen mole fraction in the component enrichment zone. According to the Chapman–Enskog theory, the dynamic viscosity scales as
μ =
/(
dHS)
2, where
m is the molecular mass and
dHS is the collision diameter. From standard gas property data at the same temperature, the viscosity ratio
μH2/
μCH4 is approximately 0.54, confirming that hydrogen has a significantly lower dynamic viscosity than methane. This difference stems mainly from the much lower dynamic viscosity of hydrogen, which makes it more sensitive to temperature gradients and enhances its thermal transpiration response. This tangential velocity difference in tangential velocity of the two components caused by the dynamic viscosity difference that enables the separation of the gas mixture, ultimately enriching hydrogen in the downstream of channel F.
As shown in
Figure 5b, the pressure in channel F gradually decreases when the mixed gas flows through the separator inlet along the horizontal centerline
xF of channel F; conversely, the pressure in channel R gradually increases when mixed gas advances toward the interior of the separator along the horizontal centerline
xR of channel R. This indicates the presence of pressure drop inside the separator. The pressure drop in channels F and R attenuates the influence of the Poiseuille flow on the motion of gas mixture within the microchannels, resulting in a lower tangential velocity in the upstream microchannels compared with the downstream ones, as observed in
Figure 5a. As channel F temperature
TF increases, the pressure in channel F rises while that in channel R decreases, which enhances gas separation due to the strengthened thermal transpiration effect.
Figure 6 shows the fitted curve obtained by nonlinear regression, indicating that the average hydrogen mole fraction increases monotonically but at a gradually decreasing rate, indicating a saturating trend as the channel F temperature
TF rises. While a larger temperature gradient enhances the thermal transpiration effect and promotes hydrogen migration from channel R toward channel F through the microchannels, it also intensifies this effect on methane molecules at the microchannel center. This, in turn, shifts their tangential velocity from negative toward positive values, thereby moderating the improvement in separation efficiency (see
Figure 5a). From an engineering application perspective, this implies that relying solely on the increase of hot channel (channel F) temperature to achieve higher separation efficiency will lead to diminishing returns. Therefore, a system design employing coupled multistage separators and graded utilization of available thermal resources may be considered, allowing each stage to operate at a suitable temperature and thereby improving the overall utilization of the temperature gradient. Additionally, any temperature increase requires consideration of the long-term thermal resistance of the microchannel materials to avoid material failures induced by excessively high temperature.
3.2. Effect of Inlet Gas Velocity U0 on Separator Performance
The tangential velocity of the gas along the axes of microchannels is jointly influenced by the thermal transpiration flow near the walls and the Poiseuille flow in the microchannel center. From a dimensionless perspective, the relative importance of these two transport mechanisms can be qualitatively interpreted using the normalized temperature-gradient term (h∇Tg/Tm) and the normalized pressure-gradient term (h∇pg/pm), which are associated with thermal transpiration flow and Poiseuille flow, respectively. Here, h is the microchannel length, while Tm and pm denote the average temperature and pressure in the microchannel, respectively. Although the present model directly solves the resultant velocity distribution rather than separately decomposing it into thermal-transpiration and Poiseuille-flow components, the competition between these two mechanisms can still be understood in terms of the relative dominance of the corresponding thermal and pressure driving effects. The intensity of the Poiseuille flow is directly related to the internal pressure distribution of the separator. In this study, the outlet pressure is maintained as constant, while the inlet gas velocity is treated as a variable parameter. As the inlet gas velocity varies, the internal pressure distribution in the separator is adjusted accordingly to satisfy the fixed outlet pressure boundary condition, which can affect gas separation performance. Therefore, the inlet gas velocity has a significant influence on the performance of the separator. Under the conditions of channel F temperature TF at 400 K and the microchannel diameter d at 4 μm, the influence of different inlet gas velocities on the hydrogen separation was systematically investigated.
As presented in
Figure 7, the hydrogen mole fraction within the component enrichment zone initially increases and then decreases as the inlet gas velocity rises. When inlet gas velocities
U0 are set to 0.25 m/s, 0.5 m/s, 1 m/s and 2 m/s, the corresponding average hydrogen mole fractions
are 0.346, 0.401, 0.429 and 0.389, respectively.
As seen from
Figure 8a, as the inlet gas velocity increases, the tangential velocity of both components near the microchannel walls changes only slightly, whereas that at the microchannel center decreases gradually. When inlet gas velocity
U0 is 0.25 m/s, 0.5 m/s, and 1 m/s, the proportion of the region where methane exhibits a negative tangential velocity gradually increases, indicating that the fraction of methane migrating from the cold channel (channel R) to the hot channel (channel F) through the microchannels progressively decreases. This partly raises the mole fraction of hydrogen in the hot channel (channel F), which enhances the separation of hydrogen from the methane-hydrogen mixture and consequently increases the hydrogen mole fraction in the component enrichment zone. However, when the inlet gas velocity
U0 increases to
U0 = 2 m/s, the tangential velocity of hydrogen in some microchannels also becomes negative, indicating that a portion of hydrogen molecules begins to migrate from the hot channel (channel F) back to the cold channel (channel R) through those microchannels. This behavior partly reduces the mole fraction of hydrogen in the hot channel (channel F) and leads to a decline in the hydrogen mole fraction in the component enrichment zone. Together, these changes cause the hydrogen mole fraction in the component enrichment zone to exhibit a single-peak (first increases then decreases) trend with the increase in inlet gas velocity
U0. As discussed in
Section 3.1, hydrogen has a significantly lower dynamic viscosity than methane. In the microchannel center zone dominated by the Poiseuille-flow mechanism, the lower viscosity makes hydrogen more sensitive to the pressure gradient, which leads to a greater attenuation of its tangential velocity.
As shown in
Figure 8b, both the pressures in channels F and R increase with the rise in inlet gas velocity, and the pressure difference between channels F and R along
xF and
xR also increases. This is because the inlet is specified as a variable velocity boundary condition, while the outlet is defined as a fixed pressure boundary condition. To maintain the specified inlet gas velocity against the significantly increased viscous resistance, the overall pressure level throughout channels F and R must be raised.
Figure 8b shows an upward shift in the pressure distribution curves under different inlet gas velocities, indicating that the inlet gas velocity directly determines the global pressure required to drive macroscopic flows in channels F and R. The elevated pressure strengthens the Poiseuille flow, which also explains why the tangential velocities of both components at the microchannel center zone decrease as the inlet gas velocity increases (see
Figure 8a). Furthermore, when the inlet gas velocity is excessively high, the hydrogen molecules enriched in the component enrichment zone become diluted by the mainstream flow, which also contributes to the decline in hydrogen mole fraction in the component enrichment zone.
Figure 9 exhibits a pronounced single-peak distribution pattern of the average hydrogen mole fraction as a function of inlet gas velocity. Nonlinear fitting and extremum analysis reveal that within the investigated parameter range, the inlet gas velocity corresponding to the maximum average hydrogen mole fraction is approximately 0.93 m/s. From an engineering application perspective, this optimum velocity provides a clear reference point for balancing the competition of thermal transpiration flow and Poiseuille flow within the separator. Deviating above or below this optimum velocity disrupts the equilibrium between the two types of flow, leading to reduced hydrogen enrichment. Therefore, this optimum inlet gas velocity is the optimal for the theoretical separation performance predicted by the present model within the present model, serving as a critical benchmark for subsequent parameter studies and model refinement.
3.3. Effect of Microchannel Diameter d on Separator Performance
The microchannel diameter, which can determine the molecular mean free path, is an important factor affecting the thermal transpiration flow. In this regard, the length of the membrane region Lm is kept constant, and only the microchannel diameter d is varied to isolate its influence on the separation behavior. Although the wall thickness varies with d, it primarily serves to maintain the temperature gradient along the microchannels and is not expected to significantly affect the temperature distribution under the present operating conditions. Therefore, under the conditions of the channel F temperature TF at 400 K and the inlet gas velocity U0 at 1 m/s, the influence of different microchannel diameters on the hydrogen separation was systematically investigated.
As presented in
Figure 10, the hydrogen mole fraction in the case of no microchannels (
d = 0 μm) remains at the inlet value of 0.2, indicating the absence of separation. This is attributed to the lack of confined microchannel structures required for the development of thermal transpiration and wall-induced gas–surface interactions. For configurations with microchannels, the hydrogen mole fraction increases significantly and then decreases with increasing microchannel diameter. When the microchannel diameters
d are 1 μm, 4 μm, and 7 μm, the corresponding average hydrogen mole fractions
are 0.578, 0.429, and 0.364, respectively.
Since
d = 0 corresponds to the absence of microchannel structures, the tangential velocity within the microchannels is not defined for this case, although the pressure distribution in the main channel still exists. Therefore, only cases with
d > 0 are considered for consistent comparison. As illustrated in
Figure 11a, when the microchannel diameter is small, the collision frequency between gas molecules and the channel walls increases significantly, causing the thermal transpiration effect to dominate the entire microchannel. Its influence is therefore not limited to the near-wall region but can also extend to the microchannel center zone. Consequently, at
d = 1 μm, both components still maintain relatively high positive tangential velocities at the microchannel center, indicating that thermal transpiration governs the overall flow field and drives the gas molecules to migrate from the cold channel (channel R) toward the hot channel (channel F). Since hydrogen has a lower dynamic viscosity and higher molecular mobility, it is more strongly driven by the thermal transpiration effect and can therefore migrate more easily toward the hot end and become enriched in the hot channel. As the microchannel diameter gradually increases, the influence of the wall effect on the microchannel center region weakens, whereas the Poiseuille flow becomes increasingly significant. Under the enhanced pressure-gradient-driven effect, the tangential velocities of both components at the microchannel center decrease, among which hydrogen exhibits a more pronounced reduction because of its lower dynamic viscosity and higher sensitivity to the variations in Poiseuille flow. As a result, the average velocity difference between hydrogen and methane generated by the thermal transpiration effect gradually decreases, weakening the selective transport capability between the two components and thereby reducing the preferential migration of hydrogen from the cold end to the hot end. When the microchannel diameter further increases to
d = 7 μm, the tangential velocity of hydrogen in some regions even becomes lower than that of methane, leading to a further reduction in the net hydrogen flux from the cold channel to the hot channel. Consequently, the hydrogen enrichment capability in the hot channel declines. Overall, increasing the microchannel diameter strengthens the suppressive effect of the Poiseuille flow on thermal transpiration and simultaneously reduces the average velocity difference between the two gas components, thereby weakening the hydrogen separation performance of the separator.
As shown in
Figure 11b, the increase in microchannel diameter makes the pressures in both channels F and R decrease, and the pressure difference between channels F and R along
xF and
xR also diminishes. This is primarily due to the reduced flow resistance resulting from a larger microchannel diameter, which lowers the overall pressure level of the separator. Although the decreased pressure drop across the microchannels linearly weakens the intensity of the Poiseuille flow, the increase in microchannel diameter has a more dominant effect, which is proportional to the square of the diameter. Therefore, as illustrated in
Figure 11a, the tangential velocity at the microchannel center zone decreases as the microchannel diameter increases—a consequence of the square-law enhancement overpowering the linear reduction in pressure difference.
According to
Figure 12, the fitted curve obtained by nonlinear regression shows that the average hydrogen mole fraction decreases monotonically with increasing microchannel diameter
d, indicating that smaller microchannel diameters are more favorable for hydrogen enrichment. Combined with
Figure 13, it can be observed that the product gas flow rate
J from the separator increases gradually as the microchannel diameter increases. This indicates that although a smaller microchannel diameter can produce a more hydrogen-enriched product gas, it also increases the gas flow resistance, thereby reducing the outlet flow rate of the product gas. In contrast, a larger microchannel diameter enhances the gas transport capability and outlet flow rate, but weakens the selective transport ability induced by the thermal transpiration effect between different gas components, resulting in a decline in enrichment performance. Therefore, from an engineering application perspective, the design of the microchannel diameter requires a comprehensive trade-off between hydrogen purity and product gas flow rate. When the microchannel diameter is excessively small, although a relatively high hydrogen mole fraction can be achieved, the large flow resistance limits the system’s processing capacity and gas production efficiency. Conversely, when the microchannel diameter is excessively large, although the product gas flow rate is improved, the reduced separation performance lowers the hydrogen quality. Consequently, in the practical design of the separator, the microchannel diameter should be reasonably optimized according to the target operating conditions and application requirements, so as to achieve a balance between hydrogen purity and product gas flow rate, thereby achieving stable and efficient separation performance.
The above results also indicate an important practical limitation for scale-up. Although reducing the microchannel diameter can enhance hydrogen enrichment, this improvement is obtained at the expense of increased flow resistance and reduced product gas flow rate. Therefore, at the present stage, the proposed separator remains a preliminary concept requiring further scale-up-oriented evaluation. Practical design should instead balance enrichment performance, pressure-drop control, and processing capacity through the coordinated optimization of microchannel geometry and module arrangement. Moreover, implementation of this separator requires further assessment of thermal-energy utilization for maintaining the imposed temperature difference, fabrication tolerance and uniformity of micron-scale channels, long-term resistance to fouling or blockage, and process-level competitiveness compared with established hydrogen separation technologies.