Competitive adsorption-driven CO2/N2 separation in monolayer fullerene membranes with funnel-shaped pores

Abstract

Efficient CO2/N2 separation is critical for advancing carbon capture technologies to mitigate climate impacts from industrial emissions. In this study, we model an idealized, defect-free monolayer fullerene membrane featuring funnel-shaped nanochannels to investigate the CO2/N2 separation mechanism by combining first-principles calculations and molecular dynamics simulations. The unique nanochannel geometry induces a dual mechanism (1) competitive adsorption preferentially enriches CO2 at the membrane surface, and (2) nanopore confinement creates a pronounced difference in free energy barriers for translocation (25.89 kJ/mol for CO2 vs. 47.81 kJ/mol for N2), facilitating highly selective CO2 permeation. This synergistic interplay yields exceptional performance, with a CO2/N2 selectivity of 3564 and a CO2 permeance of 2.11 × 10-5 mol m-2 s-1 Pa-1 at 300 K, representing an upper-bound predictions or an idealized, defect-free sheet that surpassing conventional membrane benchmarks. Additionally, rotational density of states analysis reveals that both CO2 and N2 exhibit notably enhanced high-frequency rotational modes when traversing the funnel-shaped nanochannels, but stronger rotational constraints significantly restrict N2 diffusion compared to CO2. These findings highlight the promise of monolayer fullerene membranes as sustainable, high-performance solutions for gas separation, and provide mechanistic insights for the rational design of advanced nanochannel architectures in future separation technologies.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Nov 2025
Accepted
17 Feb 2026
First published
24 Feb 2026

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Competitive adsorption-driven CO2/N2 separation in monolayer fullerene membranes with funnel-shaped pores

R. Han, J. Guan, H. Lu, Y. Ma, M. Zhao, W. Li and Y. Qu, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5CP04366B

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