Highly efficient separation of carbon dioxide by a metal-organic framework replete with open metal sites
Article 2009 en
Authors
DB
David K. Britt
HF
Hiroyasu Furukawa
BW
Bo Wang
Abstract
1 min read
Selective capture of CO 2 , which is essential for natural gas purification and CO 2 sequestration, has been reported in zeolites, porous membranes, and amine solutions. However, all such systems require substantial energy input for release of captured CO 2 , leading to low energy efficiency and high cost. A new class of materials named metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) has also been demonstrated to take up voluminous amounts of CO 2 . However, these studies have been largely limited to equilibrium uptake measurements, which are a poor predictor of separation ability, rather than the more industrially relevant kinetic (dynamic) capacity. Here, we report that a known MOF, Mg-MOF-74, with open magnesium sites, rivals competitive materials in CO 2 capture, with 8.9 wt. % dynamic capacity, and undergoes facile CO 2 release at significantly lower temperature, 80 °C. Mg-MOF-74 offers an excellent balance between dynamic capacity and regeneration. These results demonstrate the potential of MOFs with open metal sites as efficient CO 2 capture media.
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