January 20, 2017
Journal Article

Ultralow Parasitic Energy for Postcombustion CO2 Capture Realized in a Nickel lsonicotinate Metal-Organic Framework with Excellent Moisture Stability

Abstract

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have attracted significant attention as solid sorbents in gas separation processes for low-energy postcombustion CO2 capture. The parasitic energy (PE) has been put forward as a holistic parameter that measures how energy efficient (and therefore cost-effective) the CO2 capture process will be using the material. In this work, we present a nickel isonicotinate based ultramicroporous MOF, 1 [Ni-(4PyC)(2)center dot DMF], that has the lowest PE for postcombustion CO, capture reported to date. We calculate a PE of 655 kJ/kg CO2, which is lower than that of the best performing material previously reported, Mg-MOF-74. Further, 1 exhibits exceptional hydrolytic stability with the CO2 adsorption isotherm being unchanged following 7 days of steam-treatment (>85% RH) or 6 months of exposure to the atmosphere. The diffusion coefficient of CO2 in 1 is also 2 orders of magnitude higher than in zeolites currently used in industrial scrubbers. Breakthrough experiments show that 1 only loses 7% of its maximum CO2 capacity under humid conditions.

Revised: July 8, 2020 | Published: January 20, 2017

Citation

Nandi S., S. Collins, D. Chakraborty, D. Banerjee, P.K. Thallapally, T.K. Woo, and R. Vaidhyanathan. 2017. Ultralow Parasitic Energy for Postcombustion CO2 Capture Realized in a Nickel lsonicotinate Metal-Organic Framework with Excellent Moisture Stability. Journal of the American Chemical Society 139, no. 5:1734–1737. PNNL-SA-125544. doi:10.1021/jacs.6b10455