Issue 89, 2015

In silico studies on the origin of selective uptake of carbon dioxide with cucurbit[7]uril amorphous material

Abstract

The efficient capture and storage of flue gases is of current interest due to environmental problems. We report the adsorption of flue gases (CO2, N2 and CH4) on amorphous solid Cucurbit[7]uril (CB[7]) computationally. The DFT calculations revealed that CO2 can be adsorbed more strongly inside the cavity of CB[7] compared to N2 and CH4 molecules. The glycoluril units of CB[7] are the preferential sites for the adsorption of CO2 gas molecules. The cooperative binding of CO2 molecules inside the cavity of CB[7] has been observed. The geometrical analysis reveals that the carbon atom of CO2 is in close proximity to the nitrogen atom of the glycoluril of CB[7] and the CO2 oxygen atom is in close contact to the carbonyl carbon of the glycoluril unit. The calculated results show that four CO2 and four CH4 molecules can reside inside the CB[7] cavity. However, five N2 gas molecules can be accommodated inside the CB[7] cavity. The energy decomposition analysis (EDA) performed with the adsorbed CO2 on the wall of CB[7] shows that the dispersive force is playing an important role for the uptake of CO2 inside the cavity. The process of desorption was also examined with the desorption enthalpies (ΔHDE) calculated per gas molecule, which suggests that both adsorption and desorption processes are kinetically feasible. The origin of the interactions between the amorphous solid CB[7] and the flue gases can help to design materials to maximize the capture and separation of such gases.

Graphical abstract: In silico studies on the origin of selective uptake of carbon dioxide with cucurbit[7]uril amorphous material

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Jul 2015
Accepted
18 Aug 2015
First published
19 Aug 2015

RSC Adv., 2015,5, 72469-72475

In silico studies on the origin of selective uptake of carbon dioxide with cucurbit[7]uril amorphous material

D. Sahu and B. Ganguly, RSC Adv., 2015, 5, 72469 DOI: 10.1039/C5RA13394G

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