Dialing in Direct Air Capture of CO 2 by Crystal Engineering of Bisiminoguanidines

Direct air capture (DAC) technologies that extract carbon dioxide from the atmosphere via chemical processes have the potential to restore the atmospheric CO concentration to an optimal level. This study elucidates structure-property relationships in DAC by crystallization of bis(iminoguanidine) (BI...

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Published inChemSusChem Vol. 13; no. 23; pp. 6381 - 6390
Main Authors Custelcean, Radu, Williams, Neil J, Wang, Xiaoping, Garrabrant, Kathleen A, Martin, Halie J, Kidder, Michelle K, Ivanov, Alexander S, Bryantsev, Vyacheslav S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Germany Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons) 07.12.2020
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Summary:Direct air capture (DAC) technologies that extract carbon dioxide from the atmosphere via chemical processes have the potential to restore the atmospheric CO concentration to an optimal level. This study elucidates structure-property relationships in DAC by crystallization of bis(iminoguanidine) (BIG) carbonate salts. Their crystal structures are analyzed by X-ray and neutron diffraction to accurately measure key structural parameters including molecular conformations, hydrogen bonding, and π-stacking. Experimental measurements of key properties, such as aqueous solubilities and regeneration energies and temperatures, are complemented by first-principles calculations of lattice and hydration free energies, as well as free energies of reactions with CO , and BIG regenerations. Minor structural modifications in the molecular structure of the BIGs are found to result in major changes in the crystal structures and the aqueous solubilities within the series, leading to enhanced DAC.
Bibliography:USDOE
ISSN:1864-5631
1864-564X
DOI:10.1002/cssc.202001114