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Revealing carbon capture chemistry with 17-oxygen NMR spectroscopy.

Astrid H BergeSuzi M PughMarion I M ShortChanjot KaurZiheng LuJung-Hoon LeeChris J PickardAbdelhamid SayariAlexander C Forse
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Carbon dioxide capture is essential to achieve net-zero emissions. A hurdle to the design of improved capture materials is the lack of adequate tools to characterise how CO 2 adsorbs. Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a promising probe of CO 2 capture, but it remains challenging to distinguish different adsorption products. Here we perform a comprehensive computational investigation of 22 amine-functionalised metal-organic frameworks and discover that 17 O NMR is a powerful probe of CO 2 capture chemistry that provides excellent differentiation of ammonium carbamate and carbamic acid species. The computational findings are supported by 17 O NMR experiments on a series of CO 2 -loaded frameworks that clearly identify ammonium carbamate chain formation and provide evidence for a mixed carbamic acid - ammonium carbamate adsorption mode. We further find that carbamic acid formation is more prevalent in this materials class than previously believed. Finally, we show that our methods are readily applicable to other adsorbents, and find support for ammonium carbamate formation in amine-grafted silicas. Our work paves the way for investigations of carbon capture chemistry that can enable materials design.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • solid state
  • carbon dioxide
  • ionic liquid
  • high resolution
  • metal organic framework
  • drug delivery
  • quantum dots
  • drug discovery
  • living cells
  • cancer therapy