4.7 Article

Binder-free 3D printing of covalent organic framework (COF) monoliths for CO2 adsorption

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 403, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2020.126333

Keywords

3D covalent organic framework monolith; Binder-free 3D printing; CO2 adsorption

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education Singapore [MOE AcRF Tier 2 MOE2019-T2-1-093]
  2. Singapore MOE [R284-000-193-114]

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COFs are typically synthesized in powder form, but the addition of binders can increase costs and decrease surface area of active materials, posing challenges for maintaining surface functionality. Binders-free 3D printing technology for COFs can produce crack-free monoliths with larger surface area and improved sorption selectivity.
Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) present a large group of crystalline porous polymeric materials, which are formed with organic building blocks by strong covalent bonds. They have great potential in energy, environment, and biotechnology areas due to their high surface areas, tunable pore size distribution, and versatile functionality. However, they are largely synthesized in powder form only. The recent 3D printing technology requires the addition of binders. For the targeted applications in gas separation and adsorption, the existence of any binders not only increases the cost, but also reduces the surface area of the active materials and adds on dummy weight, which is especially harmful to functional porous materials where the retention of surface functionality and surface area is paramount. Herein, we report a binder-free, 3D printing process for COF materials (SNW-1 and ATFG-COF), capable of producing free-standing, crack-free 3D COF monoliths by the control of the solvent choices and their diffusion and evaporation among the different parts of the monoliths. Compared to SNW-1 with F127 binder added, the binder-free 3D monolith shows a larger surface area of 794 m(2)/g, which is similar to SNW-1 powder. The higher CO2 adsorption and CO2/N2 sorption selectivity compared to monoliths made with F127 binder further demonstrate the advantage of binder-free, 3D printing technology applied to COFs.

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