4.2 Article

Sub-Ambient Temperature Direct Air Capture of CO2 using Amine-Impregnated MIL-101(Cr) Enables Ambient Temperature CO2 Recovery

Journal

JACS AU
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages 380-393

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacsau.1c00414

Keywords

metal-organic framework; amine; direct air capture; sub-ambient conditions; temperature swing adsorption

Funding

  1. National Energy Technology Laboratory of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-FE-FE0031952]
  2. Zero Carbon Partners, LLC.

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This study demonstrates promising CO2 adsorption and desorption behavior of MIL-101(Cr) materials impregnated with amines (TEPA or PEI) under low temperatures and humidity conditions in direct air capture. The results suggest that appropriately designed sorbents can achieve efficient CO2 capture at low temperatures and humidity, providing potential for energy-saving emission reduction.
Due to the dramatically increased atmospheric CO2 concentration and consequential climate change, significant effort has been made to develop sorbents to directly capture CO2 from ambient air (direct air capture, DAC) to achieve negative CO2 emissions in the immediate future. However, most developed sorbents have been studied under a limited array of temperature (>20 degrees C) and humidity conditions. In particular, the dearth of experimental data on DAC at sub-ambient conditions (e.g., -30 to 20 degrees C) and under humid conditions will severely hinder the largescale implementation of DAC because the world has annual average temperatures ranging from -30 to 30 degrees C depending on the location and essentially no place has a zero absolute humidity. To this end, we suggest that understanding CO2 adsorption from ambient air at sub-ambient temperatures, below 20 degrees C, is crucial because colder temperatures represent important practical operating conditions and because such temperatures may provide conditions where new sorbent materials or enhanced process performance might be achieved. Here we demonstrate that MIL-101(Cr) materials impregnated with amines (TEPA, tetraethylenepentamine, or PEI, poly(ethylenimine)) offer promising adsorption and desorption behavior under DAC conditions in both the presence and absence of humidity under a wide range of temperatures (-20 to 25 degrees C). Depending on the amine loading and adsorption temperature, the sorbents show different CO2 capture behavior. With 30 and 50 wt % amine loadings, the sorbents show weak and strong chemisorption-dominant CO2 capture behavior, respectively. Interestingly, at -20 degrees C, the CO2 adsorption capacity of 30 wt % TEPA-impregnated MIL-101(Cr) significantly increased up to 1.12 mmol/g from 0.39 mmol/g at ambient conditions (25 degrees C) due to the enhanced weak chemisorption. More importantly, the sorbents also show promising working capacities (0.72 mmol/g) over 15 small temperature swing cycles with an ultralow regeneration temperature (-20 degrees C sorption to 25 degrees C desorption). The sub-ambient DAC performance of the sorbents is further enhanced under humid conditions, showing promising and stable CO2 working capacities over multiple humid small temperature swing cycles. These results demonstrate that appropriately designed DAC sorbents can operate in a weak chemisorption modality at low temperatures even in the presence of humidity. Significant energy savings may be realized via the utilization of small temperature swings enabled by this weak chemisorption behavior. This work suggests that significant work on DAC materials that operate at low, sub-ambient temperatures is warranted for possible deployment in temperate and polar climates.

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