KeywordsCO 2 capture, traces CO 2 removal, air capture, physical adsorbents, MOFs
AbstractThe capture and separation of traces and concentrated CO 2 from important commodities such as CH 4 , H 2 , O 2 and N 2, is becoming important in many areas related to energy security and environmental sustainability. While trace CO 2 concentration removal applications have been modestly studied for decades, the spike in interest in the capture of concentrated CO 2 was motivated by the need for new energy vectors to replace highly concentrated carbon fuels and the necessity to reduce emissions from fossil fuel-fired power plants. CO 2 capture from various gas streams, at different concentrations, using physical adsorbents, such as activated carbon, zeolites, and metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), is attractive. However, the adsorbents must be designed with consideration of many parameters including CO 2 affinity, kinetics, energetics, stability, capture mechanism, in addition to cost. Here, we perform a systematic analysis regarding the key technical parameters that are required for the best CO 2 capture performance using physical adsorbents. We also experimentally demonstrate a suitable 2 material model of Metal Organic Framework as advanced adsorbents with unprecedented properties for CO 2 capture in a wide range of CO 2 concentration. These recently developed class of MOF adsorbents represent a breakthrough finding in the removal of traces CO 2 using physical adsorption.This platform shows colossal tuning potential for more efficient separation agents.