The Advanced Membranes and Porous Materials Platform is a unique hub of scientists, who are collaborative and goal-oriented, focused on important industrial separations using membranes and porous materials. Our team includes chemists and chemical engineers who tackle common challenges, targeting highly energy-intensive applications in petrochemicals, natural gas processing, and air separation.
This collaborative effort enhances research in membrane and porous materials while striving to merge these two material classes into mixed-matrix membranes.
Our research philosophy is collaborative, goal-oriented, and works to substantially reduce energy costs and increase sustainability through reduced waste production and benign carbon capture technologies. We carry out these objectives in collaboration with academic and industrial partners. Our aim is to enhance the prosperity of the Kingdom and the world through innovative research.
We welcome colleagues from KAUST and partner universities across the Kingdom to benefit from our facilities and infrastructure. We also encourage collaborative engagements with our platform staff in advancing the AMPM Platform's research and innovation goals. To explore opportunities or discuss potential ideas, please reach out to any of the team members listed below.
Additionally, we offer comprehensive training for students, postdoctoral researchers, and scientists, equipping the next generation to advance innovation in this field.
The Advance Membranes and Porous Materials Platform is equipped with state-of-the-art facilities and assets that support our cutting-edge research initiatives. The infrastructure includes:
Manufacturer: TA Instruments
DMA measures the mechanical and viscoelastic properties of
materials (like polymers, composites, rubbers, and fibers)
as a function of temperature, time, frequency, stress, or
environment. It tells you how a material behaves under
mechanical stress when temperature changes — basically how
stiff, soft, or dampening it becomes.
Manufacturer: TA Instruments
TGA measures the change in a material’s weight (mass) as
it is heated, cooled, or held at constant temperature.
This reveals thermal stability, composition, and
decomposition behavior of materials.
Manufacturer: TA Instruments
A DSC measures how much heat flow (energy) a material
absorbs or releases when it is heated, cooled, or held
at a constant temperature. It reveals thermal
transitions such as melting, crystallization, glass
transition, and curing.
Manufacturer: TA Instruments
A rheometer measures the flow and deformation behavior
(rheology) of materials under applied stress, strain, or
shear. The AR-G2 Rheometer (from TA Instruments) is
designed to study viscosity, viscoelasticity, and flow
properties of complex fluids and soft solids.
Manufacturer: Micromeritics
The 3Flex measures the surface area, pore size, and pore
volume of solid materials by gas adsorption. It is
widely used to study porous materials such as catalysts,
carbons, zeolites, ceramics, and metal-organic
frameworks (MOFs).
Manufacturer: PANalytical
PXRD is used to identify and characterize crystalline
materials in powdered (or polycrystalline) form. It
tells you about a material’s crystal structure, phase
composition, and crystallinity.
Manufacturer: Thermo scientific
FTIR (Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy) is used
to identify and characterize materials by measuring how
they absorb infrared (IR) light. It provides information
about the chemical bonds, functional groups, and
molecular structure of a sample.
Manufacturer: Malvern
Zeta potential measures the surface charge of particles
dispersed in a liquid. It indicates how stable a
colloidal system (like nanoparticles, emulsions, or
suspensions) is against aggregation or settling.
Manufacturer: ZEISS
A Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) produces
high-resolution images of sample surfaces by scanning
them with a focused beam of electrons. It reveals
surface morphology, topography, composition, and
microstructure at magnifications far greater than light
microscopes.
Manufacturer: Bruker
It is an analytical technique used to determine the
three-dimensional atomic and molecular structure of a
crystalline material.