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CO2 Capture in Dry and Wet Conditions in UTSA-16 Metal-Organic Framework.

Alessio MasalaJenny G VitilloGiorgia MondinoCarlos A GrandeRichard BlomMaela ManzoliMarc MarshallSilvia Bordiga
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2016)
Water is the strongest competitor to CO2 in the adsorption on microporous materials, affecting their performances as CO2 scrubbers in processes such as postcombustion carbon capture. The metal-organic framework (MOF) UTSA-16 is considered a promising material for its capacity to efficiently capture CO2 in large quantities, thanks to the presence of open metal sites (OMSs). It is here shown that UTSA-16 is also able to desorb fully water already at room temperature. This property is unique from all the other materials with OMSs reported so far. UTSA-16 retains indeed the 70% of its CO2 separation capacity after admittance of water in a test flow, created to simulate the emissions from a real postcombustion carbon-capture process. This important aspect not yet observed for any other amine-free material, associated with a high material stability-tested for 160 cycles-and a small temperature swing necessary for regeneration, places UTSA-16 in the restrict number of systems with a real technological future for CO2 separation.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • room temperature
  • stem cells
  • liquid chromatography
  • minimally invasive
  • mass spectrometry
  • risk assessment