Publication | Open Access
Water Enables Efficient CO<sub>2</sub> Capture from Natural Gas Flue Emissions in an Oxidation-Resistant Diamine-Appended Metal–Organic Framework
162
Citations
93
References
2019
Year
Supported by increasingly available reserves, natural gas is achieving greater adoption as a cleaner-burning alternative to coal in the power sector. As a result, carbon capture and sequestration from natural gas-fired power plants is an attractive strategy to mitigate global anthropogenic CO<sub>2</sub> emissions. However, the separation of CO<sub>2</sub> from other components in the flue streams of gas-fired power plants is particularly challenging due to the low CO<sub>2</sub> partial pressure (∼40 mbar), which necessitates that candidate separation materials bind CO<sub>2</sub> strongly at low partial pressures (≤4 mbar) to capture ≥90% of the emitted CO<sub>2</sub>. High partial pressures of O<sub>2</sub> (120 mbar) and water (80 mbar) in these flue streams have also presented significant barriers to the deployment of new technologies for CO<sub>2</sub> capture from gas-fired power plants. Here, we demonstrate that functionalization of the metal-organic framework Mg<sub>2</sub>(dobpdc) (dobpdc<sup>4-</sup> = 4,4'-dioxidobiphenyl-3,3'-dicarboxylate) with the cyclic diamine 2-(aminomethyl)piperidine (2-ampd) produces an adsorbent that is capable of ≥90% CO<sub>2</sub> capture from a humid natural gas flue emission stream, as confirmed by breakthrough measurements. This material captures CO<sub>2</sub> by a cooperative mechanism that enables access to a large CO<sub>2</sub> cycling capacity with a small temperature swing (2.4 mmol CO<sub>2</sub>/g with Δ<i>T</i> = 100 °C). Significantly, multicomponent adsorption experiments, infrared spectroscopy, magic angle spinning solid-state NMR spectroscopy, and van der Waals-corrected density functional theory studies suggest that water enhances CO<sub>2</sub> capture in 2-ampd-Mg<sub>2</sub>(dobpdc) through hydrogen-bonding interactions with the carbamate groups of the ammonium carbamate chains formed upon CO<sub>2</sub> adsorption, thereby increasing the thermodynamic driving force for CO<sub>2</sub> binding. In light of the exceptional thermal and oxidative stability of 2-ampd-Mg<sub>2</sub>(dobpdc), its high CO<sub>2</sub> adsorption capacity, and its high CO<sub>2</sub> capture rate from a simulated natural gas flue emission stream, this material is one of the most promising adsorbents to date for this important separation.
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