4.8 Article

Multipulsed Millisecond Ozone Gasification for Predictable Tuning of Nucleation and Nucleation-Decoupled Nanopore Expansion in Graphene for Carbon Capture

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 13230-13239

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c02927

Keywords

single-layer graphene; carbon capture; membrane; nanopore; pore nucleation; pore expansion

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation Assistant Professor Energy Grant [PYAPP2_173645]
  2. European Research Council [805437]
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation Project [200021_192005]
  4. EPFL-Taiwan Scholarship program
  5. EPFL
  6. GAZNAT
  7. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [200021_192005] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)
  8. European Research Council (ERC) [805437] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Predictable and tunable etching of angstrom-scale nanopores in single-layer graphene is achieved through the development of two etching regimes, resulting in high-performance nanoporous SLG membranes for efficient gas separation. The etching strategy demonstrates uniformity and scalability, leading to the successful fabrication of high-performance centimeter-scale membranes.
Predictable and tunable etching of angstrom-scale nanopores in single-layer graphene (SLG) can allow one to realize high-performance gas separation even from similar-sized molecules. We advance toward this goal by developing two etching regimes for SLG where the incorporation of angstrom-scale vacancy defects can be controlled. We screen several exposure profiles for the etchant, controlled by a multipulse millisecond treatment, using a mathematical model predicting the nucleation and pore expansion rates. The screened profiles yield a narrow pore-size-distribution (PSD) with a majority of defects smaller than missing 16 carbon atoms, suitable for CO2/N-2 separation, attributing to the reduced pore expansion rate at a high pore density. Resulting nanoporous SLG (N-SLG) membranes yield attractive CO2 permeance of 4400 +/- 2070 GPU and CO2/N-2 selectivity of 33.4 +/- 7.9. In the second etching regime, by limiting the supply of the etchant, the nanopores are allowed to expand while suppressing the nucleation events. Extremely attractive carbon capture performance marked with CO2 permeance of 8730 GPU, and CO2/N-2 selectivity of 33.4 is obtained when CO2-selective polymeric chains are functionalized on the expanded nanopores. We show that the etching strategy is uniform and scalable by successfully fabricating high-performance centimeter-scale membrane.

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