Back to Search Start Over

Trace CO2 capture by an ultramicroporous physisorbent with low water affinity

Authors :
Hayley S. Scott
Nivedita Sikdar
Daniel O'Nolan
David G. Madden
Michael J. Zaworotko
Douglas M. Franz
Brian Space
Naveen Kumar
Soumya Mukherjee
Victoria Gascón
Paul E. Kruger
Amrit Kumar
SFI
National Science Foundation
Mukherjee, Soumya [0000-0003-2375-7009]
O'Nolan, Daniel [0000-0003-1798-3704]
Gascón, Victoria [0000-0002-9927-2713]
Kumar, Amrit [0000-0002-6329-4582]
Kumar, Naveen [0000-0002-5282-7304]
Madden, David G [0000-0003-3875-9146]
Kruger, Paul E [0000-0003-4847-6780]
Space, Brian [0000-0003-0246-7408]
Zaworotko, Michael J [0000-0002-1360-540X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Science Advances
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2020.

Abstract

The first sorbent with high CO2 selectivity and poor water affinity addresses need for trace CO2 remediation in confined spaces.<br />CO2 accumulation in confined spaces represents an increasing environmental and health problem. Trace CO2 capture remains an unmet challenge because human health risks can occur at 1000 parts per million (ppm), a level that challenges current generations of chemisorbents (high energy footprint and slow kinetics) and physisorbents (poor selectivity for CO2, especially versus water vapor, and/or poor hydrolytic stability). Here, dynamic breakthrough gas experiments conducted upon the ultramicroporous material SIFSIX-18-Ni-β reveal trace (1000 to 10,000 ppm) CO2 removal from humid air. We attribute the performance of SIFSIX-18-Ni-β to two factors that are usually mutually exclusive: a new type of strong CO2 binding site and hydrophobicity similar to ZIF-8. SIFSIX-18-Ni-β also offers fast sorption kinetics to enable selective capture of CO2 over both N2 (SCN) and H2O (SCW), making it prototypal for a previously unknown class of physisorbents that exhibit effective trace CO2 capture under both dry and humid conditions.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd331ee21c50966bb8a239f93b1e3787
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.47760