Chem & Bio Engineering (Feb 2024)

Alumina Incorporation in Self-Supported Poly(ethylenimine) Sorbents for Direct Air Capture

  • Pavithra Narayanan,
  • Pranav Guntupalli,
  • Ryan P. Lively,
  • Christopher W. Jones

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/cbe.3c00079
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
pp. 157 – 170

Abstract

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Self-supported branched poly­(ethylenimine) scaffolds with ordered macropores are synthesized with and without Al2O3 powder additive by cross-linking poly­(ethylenimine) (PEI) with poly­(ethylene glycol) diglycidyl ether (PEGDGE) at −196 °C. The scaffolds’ CO2 uptake performance is compared with a conventional sorbent, i.e., PEI impregnated on an Al2O3 support. PEI scaffolds with Al2O3 additive show narrow pore size distribution and thinner pore walls than alumina-free materials, facilitating higher CO2 uptake at conditions relevant to direct air capture. The PEI scaffold containing 6.5 wt % Al2O3 had the highest CO2 uptake of 1.23 mmol/g of sorbent under 50% RH 400 ppm of CO2 conditions. In situ DRIFT spectroscopy and temperature-programmed desorption experiments show a significant CO2 uptake contribution via physisorption as well as carbamic acid formation, with lower CO2 binding energies in PEI scaffolds relative to conventional PEI sorbents, likely a result of a lower population of primary amines due to the amine cross-linking reactions during scaffold synthesis. The PEI scaffold containing 6.5 wt % Al2O3 is estimated to have the lowest desorption energy penalty under humid conditions, 4.6 GJ/tCO2, among the sorbents studied.