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Self-assembled iron-containing mordenite monolith for carbon dioxide sieving.

Yu ZhouJianlin ZhangLei WangXili CuiXiaoling LiuSie Shing WongHua AnNing YanJingyan XieCong YuPeixin ZhangYong-Hua DuShibo XiLi-Rong ZhengXing-Zhong CaoYajing WuYingxia WangChongqing WangHaimeng WenLei ChenHuabin XingJun Wang
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2021)
The development of low-cost, efficient physisorbents is essential for gas adsorption and separation; however, the intrinsic tradeoff between capacity and selectivity, as well as the unavoidable shaping procedures of conventional powder sorbents, greatly limits their practical separation efficiency. Herein, an exceedingly stable iron-containing mordenite zeolite monolith with a pore system of precisely narrowed microchannels was self-assembled using a one-pot template- and binder-free process. Iron-containing mordenite monoliths that could be used directly for industrial application afforded record-high volumetric carbon dioxide uptakes (293 and 219 cubic centimeters of carbon dioxide per cubic centimeter of material at 273 and 298 K, respectively, at 1 bar pressure); excellent size-exclusive molecular sieving of carbon dioxide over argon, nitrogen, and methane; stable recyclability; and good moisture resistance capability. Column breakthrough experiments and process simulation further visualized the high separation efficiency.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • low cost
  • liquid chromatography
  • iron deficiency
  • mass spectrometry
  • solid phase extraction
  • heavy metals
  • wastewater treatment
  • molecularly imprinted