Carbon dioxide adsorption based on porous materials.
M Sai Bhargava ReddyDeepalekshmi PonnammaKishor Kumar SadasivuniBijandra KumarAboubakr M AbdullahPublished in: RSC advances (2021)
Global warming due to the high concentration of anthropogenic CO 2 in the atmosphere is considered one of the world's leading challenges in the 21 st century as it leads to severe consequences such as climate change, extreme weather events, ocean warming, sea-level rise, declining Arctic sea ice, and the acidification of oceans. This encouraged advancing technologies that sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere or capture those emitted before entering the carbon cycle. Recently, CO 2 capture, utilizing porous materials was established as a very favorable route, which has drawn extreme interest from scientists and engineers due to their advantages over the absorption approach. In this review, we summarize developments in porous adsorbents for CO 2 capture with emphasis on recent studies. Highly efficient porous adsorption materials including metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), zeolites, mesoporous silica, clay, porous carbons, porous organic polymers (POP), and metal oxides (MO) are discussed. Besides, advanced strategies employed to increase the performance of CO 2 adsorption capacity to overcome their drawbacks have been discoursed.