134 research outputs found
Mechanism and Kinetics of CO<sub>2</sub> Adsorption on Surface Bonded Amines
The impact of H<sub>2</sub>O on the
mechanism and kinetics of CO<sub>2</sub> adsorption by amine-impregnated
SBA-15 has been investigated.
The H<sub>2</sub>O-free adsorption mechanism proceeds predominantly
via formation of carbamates stabilized between two amine groups. Bicarbonates
and surface stabilized carbamates were formed on hydrated sorbents.
Film diffusion limitations were not observed during adsorption of
CO<sub>2</sub> at high amine loadings. Gaseous water decreased the
adsorption rate but increased the maximum equilibrium uptake as well
as the uptake before breakthrough of the reactor bed. A water film
is formed on the adsorbent particles in gas streams containing more
than 5 vol %, gaseous H<sub>2</sub>O limiting the interaction of CO<sub>2</sub> with the active amine sites and constraining the rates of
adsorption. The higher uptake of CO<sub>2</sub> in the presence of
H<sub>2</sub>O vapor is a result of a change in the adsorption mechanism
that increases the amine efficiency, thus leading to a higher adsorption
capacity. The adsorption was fully reversible for all adsorbents at
a maximum desorption temperature of 100 °C
Role of Amine Functionality for CO<sub>2</sub> Chemisorption on Silica
The
mechanism of CO<sub>2</sub> adsorption on primary, secondary,
and bibasic aminosilanes synthetically functionalized in porous SiO<sub>2</sub> was qualitatively and quantitatively investigated by a combination
of IR spectroscopy, thermogravimetry, and quantum mechanical modeling.
The mode of CO<sub>2</sub> adsorption depends particularly on the
nature of the amine group and the spacing between the aminosilanes.
Primary amines bonded CO<sub>2</sub> preferentially through the formation
of intermolecular ammonium carbamates, whereas CO<sub>2</sub> was
predominantly stabilized as carbamic acid, when interacting with secondary
amines. Ammonium carbamate formation requires the transfer of the
carbamic acid proton to a second primary amine group to form the ammonium
ion and hence two (primary) amine groups are required to bind one
CO<sub>2</sub> molecule. The higher base strength of secondary amines
enables the stabilization of carbamic acid, which is thereby hindered
to interact further with nearby amine functions, because their association
with Si–OH groups (either protonation or hydrogen bonding)
does not allow further stabilization of carbamic acid as carbamate.
Steric hindrance of the formation of intermolecular ammonium carbamates
leads to higher uptake capacities for secondary amines functionalized
in porous SiO<sub>2</sub> at higher amine densities. In aminosilanes
possessing a primary and a secondary amine group, the secondary amine
group tends to be protonated by Si–OH groups and therefore
does not substantially interact with CO<sub>2</sub>
Tunable Water and CO<sub>2</sub> Sorption Properties in Isostructural Azine-Based Covalent Organic Frameworks through Polarity Engineering
The
use of covalent organic frameworks (COFs) in environmental
settings such as atmospheric water capture or CO<sub>2</sub> separation
under realistic pre- and post-combustion conditions is largely unexplored
to date. Herein, we present two isostructural azine-linked COFs based
on 1,3,5-triformyl benzene (AB-COF) and 1,3,5-triformylphloroglucinol
(ATFG-COF) and hydrazine building units, respectively, whose sorption
characteristics are precisely tunable by the rational design of the
chemical nature of the pore walls. This effect is particularly pronounced
for atmospheric water harvesting, which is explored for the first
time using COFs as adsorbents. We demonstrate that the less polar
AB-COF acts as a reversible water capture and release reservoir, featuring
among the highest water vapor uptake capacity at low pressures reported
to date (28 wt % at <0.3 <i>p</i> <i>p</i><sub>0</sub><sup>−1</sup>). Furthermore, we show tailored CO<sub>2</sub> sorption characteristics of the COFs through polarity engineering,
demonstrating high CO<sub>2</sub> uptake at low pressures ( <1
bar) under equilibrium (sorption isotherm) and kinetic conditions
(flow TGA, breakthrough) for the more polar ATFG-COF, and very high
CO<sub>2</sub> over N<sub>2</sub> (IAST: 88) selectivity for the apolar
AB-COF. In addition, the pore walls of both COFs were modified by
doping with metal salts (lithium and zinc acetate), revealing an extremely
high CO<sub>2</sub> uptake of 4.68 mmol g<sup>−1</sup> at 273
K for the zinc-doped AB-COF
Lewis–Brønsted Acid Pairs in Ga/H-ZSM‑5 To Catalyze Dehydrogenation of Light Alkanes
The
active sites for propane dehydrogenation in Ga/H-ZSM-5 with
moderate concentrations of tetrahedral aluminum in the lattice were
identified to be Lewis–Brønsted acid pairs. With increasing
availability, Ga<sup>+</sup> and Brønsted acid site concentrations
changed inversely, as protons of Brønsted acid sites were exchanged
with Ga<sup>+</sup>. At a Ga/Al ratio of 1/2, the rate of propane
dehydrogenation was 2 orders of magnitude higher than with the parent
H-ZSM-5, highlighting the extraordinary activity of the Lewis–Brønsted
acid pairs. Density functional theory calculations relate the high
activity to a bifunctional mechanism that proceeds via heterolytic
activation of the propane C–H bond followed by a monomolecular
elimination of H<sub>2</sub> and desorption of propene
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