Carbon Dioxide Capture on Metal-organic Frameworks with Amide-decorated Pores

CO2 is the main greenhouse gas emitted from the combustion of fossil fuels and is considered a threat in the context of global warming. Carbon capture and storage (CCS) schemes embody a group of technologies for the capture of CO2 from power plants, followed by compression, transport, and permanent...

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Main Authors: Sima Kazemi, Vahid Safarifard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Iranian Chemical Society 2018-01-01
Series:Nanochemistry Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.nanochemres.org/article_65560_0a80148e5c5ea4043bb96739cc2cc710.pdf
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author Sima Kazemi
Vahid Safarifard
author_facet Sima Kazemi
Vahid Safarifard
author_sort Sima Kazemi
collection DOAJ
description CO2 is the main greenhouse gas emitted from the combustion of fossil fuels and is considered a threat in the context of global warming. Carbon capture and storage (CCS) schemes embody a group of technologies for the capture of CO2 from power plants, followed by compression, transport, and permanent storage. Key advances in recent years include the further development of new types of porous materials with high affinity and selectivity toward CO2 for optimizing the energy penalty of capture. In this regard, microporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) represent an opportunity to create next-generation materials that are optimized for real-world applications in CO2 capture. MOFs have great potential in CCS because they can store greater amounts of CO2 than other classes of porous materials, and their chemically-adjustable organic and inorganic moieties can be carefully pre-designed to be suitable for molecular recognition of CO2. Taking into account the nature of physisorption and inherent polarity of CO2 molecules, addressing materials with both a large surface area and polar pores for strong CO2 binding affinity is an effective method. Decorating the pores of MOFs with some specific functional groups by directly using functionalized organic linkers or postsynthetic modification, that have high binding affinity to CO2 molecules, is among the most promising strategies has been pursued to achieve high-performance CO2 uptake. This review highlights the literature reported on MOFs with amide-decorated pores for CO2 capture, showing the effects of amide groups on uptake capacity, selectivity and adsorption enthalpies of CO2.
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spelling doaj.art-e23e94ac559d45b799988136deac6bec2022-12-21T21:58:04ZengIranian Chemical SocietyNanochemistry Research2538-42792423-818X2018-01-0131627810.22036/ncr.2018.01.00765560Carbon Dioxide Capture on Metal-organic Frameworks with Amide-decorated PoresSima Kazemi0Vahid Safarifard1Department of Chemistry, Iran University of Science and Technology, Tehran, IranDepartment of Chemistry, Iran University of Science and Technology, Tehran, Iran.CO2 is the main greenhouse gas emitted from the combustion of fossil fuels and is considered a threat in the context of global warming. Carbon capture and storage (CCS) schemes embody a group of technologies for the capture of CO2 from power plants, followed by compression, transport, and permanent storage. Key advances in recent years include the further development of new types of porous materials with high affinity and selectivity toward CO2 for optimizing the energy penalty of capture. In this regard, microporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) represent an opportunity to create next-generation materials that are optimized for real-world applications in CO2 capture. MOFs have great potential in CCS because they can store greater amounts of CO2 than other classes of porous materials, and their chemically-adjustable organic and inorganic moieties can be carefully pre-designed to be suitable for molecular recognition of CO2. Taking into account the nature of physisorption and inherent polarity of CO2 molecules, addressing materials with both a large surface area and polar pores for strong CO2 binding affinity is an effective method. Decorating the pores of MOFs with some specific functional groups by directly using functionalized organic linkers or postsynthetic modification, that have high binding affinity to CO2 molecules, is among the most promising strategies has been pursued to achieve high-performance CO2 uptake. This review highlights the literature reported on MOFs with amide-decorated pores for CO2 capture, showing the effects of amide groups on uptake capacity, selectivity and adsorption enthalpies of CO2.http://www.nanochemres.org/article_65560_0a80148e5c5ea4043bb96739cc2cc710.pdfamideco2 capturemetal-organic frameworks
spellingShingle Sima Kazemi
Vahid Safarifard
Carbon Dioxide Capture on Metal-organic Frameworks with Amide-decorated Pores
Nanochemistry Research
amide
co2 capture
metal-organic frameworks
title Carbon Dioxide Capture on Metal-organic Frameworks with Amide-decorated Pores
title_full Carbon Dioxide Capture on Metal-organic Frameworks with Amide-decorated Pores
title_fullStr Carbon Dioxide Capture on Metal-organic Frameworks with Amide-decorated Pores
title_full_unstemmed Carbon Dioxide Capture on Metal-organic Frameworks with Amide-decorated Pores
title_short Carbon Dioxide Capture on Metal-organic Frameworks with Amide-decorated Pores
title_sort carbon dioxide capture on metal organic frameworks with amide decorated pores
topic amide
co2 capture
metal-organic frameworks
url http://www.nanochemres.org/article_65560_0a80148e5c5ea4043bb96739cc2cc710.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT simakazemi carbondioxidecaptureonmetalorganicframeworkswithamidedecoratedpores
AT vahidsafarifard carbondioxidecaptureonmetalorganicframeworkswithamidedecoratedpores