Rachel A.
Yang
a,
Darius R.
Ganza
a,
Michael R.
Smith
ab,
Stanley
Cho
a,
Jacqueline A.
Vandermel
a,
Elizabeth
Jiang
a and
Michele L.
Sarazen
*a
aDepartment of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University, 41 Olden Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA. E-mail: msarazen@princetone.edu
bDepartment of Chemistry, Princeton University, Frick Chemistry Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA
First published on 10th January 2023
Aminopolymers, poly(ethylene imine) (PEI) and poly(propylene imine) (PPI), are supported within nanoporous UiO-67(Zr) and evaluated for CO2 capture from simulated flue gas (10% CO2) and air (400 ppm CO2). N2 physisorption and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy indicate that PEI and PPI are physisorbed in UiO-67(Zr) voids but not tethered to metal nodes or carboxylate backbones. Mass-normalized CO2 capacity increases with repeated CO2 uptake-regeneration cycles for 30–50 wt% PPI, suggesting CO2 diffusion limitations at these higher loadings. 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) exposed to ambient air for 7 days demonstrate higher oxidative degradation in PEI than PPI, though PEI oxidation is reduced when stabilized within UiO-67(Zr) relative to when unconfined. Exposure of composites to liquid storage environments of varying polarity, hydrogen-bonding capability, and size indicate that 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) amine efficiencies are minimally affected by solvent-induced aminopolymer conformational changes. Conversely, 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) is more sensitive to surrounding solvent environments, exhibiting the greatest amine efficiency in methanol and the lowest in acetone due to solvent-induced aminopolymer swelling and reaction, respectively. Overall, this work provides insight into CO2 capture efficacies and chemical stabilities of composite PEI and PPI materials under various storage environments to inform future adsorbent and system design.
Branched poly(ethylenimine) (PEI) is one of the most widely studied aminopolymers,8,11 and has been predominantly incorporated into mesoporous oxides,7,8,11,12,16 but also into a variety of other nanoporous solids, including metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) for CO2 adsorption.1,13–15 Additionally, PEI is less volatile compared to non-tethered lighter amines like ethylenediamine,17 triethylenediamine,18 and tetraethylenepentamine,19 which results in lower evaporative losses of active amine sites from the support.1 However, reaction events between PEI amine functionalities and CO2 after initial chemisorption irreversibly form covalent urea-like linkages at elevated temperatures.12,20 Further, secondary amines are particularly susceptible to degradation during temperature swing-adsorption regeneration methods under oxidative environments (∼373 K) due to the formation of moieties (imines, imides, etc.) with decreased basicity that result in lower CO2 capacities and amine efficiencies.12,21,22 In contrast, poly(propylene imine) (PPI) is a similar branched, aliphatic aminopolymer compared to PEI, but the propyl backbone demonstrates enhanced resistance to degradation under oxidative environments.7,8,23,24 PPI supported in inorganic oxides have demonstrated notable amine efficiencies,7,8 but is otherwise underexplored within other more complex nanoporous solids, including MOFs, which represent some of the highest-performing CO2 adsorbents (>2 mmolCO2 gadsorbent−1) even in the absence of amine functionalization.25 MOFs are promising due to high pore volumes for aminopolymer incorporation to create adsorbents with high amine densities per unit volume without severe mass transfer limitations and due to high densities of potentially open metal and/or acidic sites for amine tethering to make more stable hybrid adsorbents. Additionally, some families like MIL-101 exhibit stability against poisoning by sulfur- or nitrogen-containing species commonly found in flue gas.26 Finally, the synthetic physicochemical tunability of MOF confining voids and relative homogeneity of active sites compared to more conventional supports like metal oxides provides the opportunity to probe aminopolymer–MOF interactions to ultimately optimize parameters that influence polymer conformation and stability for both PPI and PEI. In this work, we leverage the tunability of MOF structures to elucidate interactions between PEI and PPI within nanoporous MOFs to understand the ramifications of molecular-scale features on CO2 uptake, amine efficiency, and material stability, especially in the context of storage conditions, which are not well-understood for aminopolymer/MOF systems.
Specifically, we focus on UiO-67(Zr) (Fig. 1), which contains Zr6O4(OH)4 nodes coordinated to twelve biphenyl-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid linkers to form mesoporous octahedral (d = 2.3 nm) and microporous tetrahedral (d = 1.15 nm) cages.27 For CO2 capture, UiO-67(Zr)'s open mesoporous and microporous framework allows facile CO2 diffusion to adsorption sites and incorporation of guest moieties, including aminopolymers that can be potentially stabilized through interaction with Brønsted acid moieties (μ3-OH) on UiO-67(Zr) nodes. UiO-67(Zr) is also characterized by thermal stability in air at high temperatures (up to 723 K), making this material amenable for flue gas streams (>393 K), and by chemical stability in various solvents,28 including chloroform, pyridine, acetone, and methanol.29,30 However, it is unclear if these observations extend to longer time scales (>24 h), other solvents, and what the ramifications are for CO2 uptake; these insights are imperative for the design of future adsorbents and also for commercial usage, where synthesized materials must retain their structures and functions even after storage for extended times.
UiO-67(Zr) functionalization has increased mass-normalized CO2 capacities,31 but to our knowledge, there are no studies that investigate PEI and PPI supported within UiO-67(Zr) or probe the longer term stability of these composite adsorbent systems. In this work, PEI and PPI are supported in UiO-67(Zr) at varied weight loadings to probe the nature of aminopolymer packing within pores and the resulting ramifications for CO2 diffusion to amine adsorption sites during repeated uptake-regeneration cycles for simulated flue gas (10% CO2) and air (400 ppm CO2) streams. Exposure of PEI and PPI composite materials to varying gaseous and liquid environments at ambient temperature and pressure demonstrate the benefits of confinement within UiO-67(Zr) pores for aminopolymer stabilization against oxidative degradation; aminopolymer–solvent reactions and solvent-induced aminopolymer conformational changes are also suggested and impact observed amine efficiencies, with a more pronounced effect on PEI. Material characterization via N2 physisorption, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis further elucidate the degree of aminopolymer interaction with and mobility within UiO-67(Zr) pores. Overall, PEI and PPI within UiO-67(Zr) are shown to be promising solid adsorbents for CO2 capture, with PPI demonstrating enhanced chemical tenability. The insights into aminopolymer–MOF interactions and composite material stability in diverse storage conditions gleaned here will inform future adsorbent system design considerations for both laboratory and commercial scales.
The incorporation of poly(ethylene imine) (PEI) and PPI into UiO-67(Zr) is first probed via N2 physisorption (Fig. 3) to determine relative BET surface areas and NLDFT pore size distributions (PSDs). Parent UiO-67(Zr) exhibits high (>2000 m2 g−1) BET surface areas and sharp PSDs at 1.0 nm and 2.4 nm, which are consistent with microporous tetrahedral and mesoporous octahedral cages, respectively.27 Both 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) are characterized by drastic reductions in BET surface areas (200–250 m2 g−1) that are commiserate with reductions in mesoporosity and no observed microporosity (Fig. 3(b)). These observations are consistent with internal PPI and PEI incorporation into UiO-67(Zr) pores, rather than dense agglomerates that exist exclusively on crystal surfaces.
Fresh 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) demonstrate efficacy to increase mass-normalized CO2 adsorption compared to parent UiO-67(Zr) (0.31 ± 0.09 mmolCO2 gadsorbent−1), with similar uptakes for 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) (0.58 ± 0.01 mmolCO2 gadsorbent−1) and 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) (0.54 ± 0.01 mmolCO2 gadsorbent−1). Marginally lower initial CO2 uptakes for PPI compared to PEI observed here and for similar weight percentages in mesoporous SBA-157 are likely due to residual free acidic initiator (HBr) in synthesized PPI7 that outweigh the benefits of higher amine basicity, imposed by differing aliphatic chain lengths,24 for PPI compared to PEI. Moreover, secondary amines in commercial PEI are particularly susceptible to degradation in oxidative environments,12,21,22 resulting in decreased CO2 uptake capacities with time and uptake-regeneration cycles, while PPI has demonstrated enhanced oxidative resistance relative to PEI.7,8,23,24 Additionally, 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) demonstrates cyclic stability under temporally realistic rapid CO2 uptake-regeneration cycles with statistically insignificant losses in mass-normalized CO2 capacities over 10 cycles (Fig. S10, ESI;† 15 min uptake at 308 K, 30 min desorption under Ar at 383 K). As such, we investigate the potential stabilization of aminopolymeric structures within UiO-67(Zr) voids against oxidative environments and explore alternative storage solutions to mitigate losses in CO2 uptake capacities with time.
Short-term storage experiments at ambient temperature and pressure are conducted over 7 days in a wide range of environments, including solvents that can be utilized at scale to store solid adsorbents as suspensions or cakes. After 7 days, 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) stored in various environments are evaluated for amine efficiencies (Fig. 4) that are determined from organic mass losses quantified via combustion TGA (Fig. S8, ESI†). Aminopolymer confinement within UiO-67(Zr) pores is first evaluated through comparison of fresh samples and samples stored in air for 7 days. Here, 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) shows statistically identical amine efficiencies between the fresh sample (0.10 ± 0.03 mmolCO2 mmolN−1) and after 7 days in air (0.09 ± 0.03 mmolCO2 mmolN−1); both are notably higher than the amine efficiency of neat unconfined PPI (0.017 mmolCO2 mmolN−1). In contrast, though 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) also shows a higher mass-normalized CO2 uptake (0.58 ± 0.01 mmolCO2 gadsorbent−1) and amine efficiency (0.113 ± 0.006 mmolCO2 mmolN−1) compared to neat unconfined PEI (0.10 mmolCO2 gadsorbent−1, 0.006 mmolCO2 mmolN−1), a modest 22% loss of amine efficiency from the fresh composite sample (0.113 ± 0.006 mmolCO2 mmolN−1) after 7 days in air (0.088 ± 0.006 mmolCO2 mmolN−1) is observed, partially due to the formation of amides through chain scission and dehydration reactions of hydroperoxides observed via1H NMR (Fig. S9, ESI†) and in literature.34 These observations are consistent with PPI's enhanced oxidative stability relative to PEI. However, confinement of PEI within UiO-67(Zr) confers mild stabilization against oxidative degradation, as approximately 32% of amines in branched PEI degrades in air at 298 K based on Arrhenius studies for the degradation of branched PEI (molecular weight of ∼3000 g mol−1);35 here, extracted pre-exponential factors and activation energies are utilized to calculate the PEI degradation rate constant at 298 K (6.2 × 10−7 s−1),35 which is then utilized to determine the first-order active amine center conversion to inactive degradation products after 7 days.
Fig. 4 Amine efficiencies (mmolCO2 mmolN−1) determined from 1 h CO2 uptakes at 308 K from simulated flue gas for 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) (blue) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) (orange) after 7 days of exposure to each solvent environment. Amine contents are based on molecular weights of 400 g mol−1 for PPI (77% primary and secondary amines) and 800 g mol−1 for PEI (77% primary and secondary amines).36,37 |
PEI confinement within UiO-67(Zr) pores enhances amine oxidative stability in air relative to free PEI, though other storage methods may offer additional oxidative degradation resistance. Storage in air (humid or dry) is often the default storage method without consideration of the effect of light irradiation. After 7 days in ambient light conditions and in foil, 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) amine efficiencies remain unchanged while 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) retains its original fresh amine efficiency when shielded from light (0.111 ± 0.006 mmolCO2 mmolN−1) compared to its 22% loss relative to fresh amine efficiencies when stored in air and ambient light, in agreement with literature precedent reporting PEI degradation under oxidative UV irradiation conditions.34
Beyond gaseous storage conditions, liquid solvents of varying polarity, hydrogen-bonding capability, and size are evaluated for 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr). 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) demonstrates a high degree of chemical stability and resistance to solvent-induced polymer swelling or contraction, as all amine efficiencies after 7 days are statistically identical. As such, this discussion focuses on 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr). The effect of polarity is assessed through the comparison of water (1.000) and MeOH (0.762 relative to water) with a higher amine efficiency observed in MeOH for 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr), potentially due to greater polymer swelling through favorable interactions between MeOH's methyl moiety and PEI's aliphatic backbone; intramolecular interactions of PEI's hydrophobic aliphatic backbone may be favored in water, resulting in polymer contraction and impedance of CO2 access to internal amine adsorption sites. We note that despite similar aliphatic backbones in PEI and PPI, the apparent resistance to solvent-induced swelling or contraction observed for PPI suggests higher extents of cross-linking in as-synthesized PPI than in commercial PEI. Solvent hydrogen-bonding character is also potentially important for both interaction with UiO-67(Zr)'s hydroxyl moieties on the Zr6O4(OH)4 node and with aminopolymer N–H groups. MeOH is contrasted with acetone and MeCN to compare H-bonding acceptor/donor activity to exclusively H-bonding acceptor character to no appreciable H-bonding behavior, respectively. No trend between amine efficiency and H-bonding nature is observed, suggesting that any potential H-bonding stabilization of amine moieties during storage is minimal. Rather, polymer swelling or contraction in each solvent outweighs the impact of H-bonding. Notably, 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) amine efficiencies in MeOH and MeCN are higher than in acetone, which is consistent with the rapid formation of a white, condensed mass in acetone that may initially hinder CO2 access to amine sites.
Since hydrogen bonding character has minimal impacts on amine efficiencies in 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr), the impact of different heteroatom moieties is examined through non-H-bonding DCM and MeCN. Here, amine efficiencies are lower in halogenated DCM due to possible reactions between primary, secondary, and tertiary amine sites with DCM to form a variety of products including aminals and chloromethyl quaternary chlorides that are not proficient CO2 adsorbents.38 Finally, hexanes and comparatively bulky toluene are contrasted to determine the impact of steric size. Though diffusion barriers are likely higher for toluene than for hexanes, neither 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) nor 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) are perturbed by higher or lower internal pore access for these two nonpolar solvents. Overall, 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) is more stable than 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) in air and shows enhanced stability in a wide swath of solvents. However, 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) can be stabilized in some solvents with MeOH conferring the highest observed amine efficiency, potentially due to solvent-induced aminopolymer swelling that results in more facile amine access for CO2 adsorption. Therefore, storage as a cake or suspension rather than in air to preserve amine efficiencies over a longer period is a viable and scalable solution to stabilize both 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr).
Beyond amine efficiencies, surface functionalities are probed for 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) through FTIR spectroscopy (Fig. 5) to assess if and how aminopolymers within UiO-67(Zr) pores are tethered and to identify potential chemical changes after 7 days in differing storage environments. N—H bending17 at 835 cm−1 is evident for all 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) after 7 days in all storage environments (Fig. 5), indicating aminopolymer retention within UiO-67(Zr). However, aminopolymer interactions with UiO-67(Zr) are limited to non-specific interactions due to steric hindrance, which is suggested by the absence of a C—N vibration at approximately 1050 cm−1 that is observed for ethylenediamine tethered to UiO-67(Zr) (EDA-UiO-67(Zr)); this band in EDA-UiO-67(Zr) (Fig. 5; grey) has been observed for grafted amines interacting with the μ3-OH (Fig. 1) in Zr oxide nodes.17,18 Characteristic UiO-67(Zr) peaks belonging to C–H, O–H, and Zr6O4(OH)4 nodes that are consistent with literature17,39 are not blue-shifted in any storage environment, which further implicates non-specific interactions between PEI/PPI and UiO-67(Zr). 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) retains all characteristic bands for both UiO-67(Zr) and PPI after exposure to all storage environments, indicating minimal bulk changes in surface chemical functionality which agrees with its consistent amine efficiencies across storage environments. Though 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) amine efficiencies vary in different storage environments, all samples retain bulk characteristic band positions, suggesting that amine efficiency differences are rooted in more subtle, localized phenomenon.
Physicochemical changes in aminopolymer structure are probed through 1H NMR since parent UiO-67(Zr) mass-normalized CO2 uptakes and FTIR spectra are statistically identical across all storage environment conditions over 7 days (Fig. S3 and S6, ESI†) suggesting that changes in the MOF support are minimal. However, primary, secondary, and tertiary amine chemical shifts in PEI are not amenable to quantitative 1D 1H NMR and PPI contained in supernatant liquids recovered from 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) samples after 7 days were present in concentrations too dilute for 1H NMR analysis, suggesting PPI retention in UiO-67(Zr) pores. Therefore, commercially available PEI and as-synthesized PPI are exposed to each storage condition in the absence of UiO-67(Zr) to probe qualitative aminopolymer aggregation behaviors for both PEI and PPI and quantitative primary, secondary, and tertiary amine distributions for PPI. Qualitatively, PPI is fully dissolvable in water and MeOH, but self-aggregates in all other liquid environments (Fig. S7b, ESI†), while PEI solubilizes in all solvents by the end of 7 days, except in DCM (Fig. S7a, ESI†). Formed PPI aggregates are all chromatically consistent (light yellow) except in acetone (tan) due to imine formation, but constant amine efficiencies across tested storage environments suggest that changes in moiety basicity due to reactions with the solvent or changes in aminopolymer conformation are not severe enough to alter measured overall amine efficiencies when supported in porous materials. PEI mixtures are all colorless and clear with the exception of acetone, which reacts with PEI to form yellow imine products,40 and DCM, which reacts with PEI to potentially form insoluble aminals and chloride species.38 Reactions of PEI amines with acetone and DCM yield lower amine efficiencies in these solvents relative to fresh samples or samples stored in other solvents. There is no literature precedent to our knowledge, however, for reactions with toluene or hexanes likely due to phase separation between these nonpolar solvents and aminopolymers. Quantitative primary, secondary, and tertiary amine distributions for PPI (Fig. 6) are similar for all solvents barring the most nonpolar solvents, toluene (0.099) and hexanes (0.009) that preferentially solvate aminopolymer species containing a higher tertiary amine fraction, which are inactive for CO2 adsorption under this system's dry conditions.41 This potentially indicates that more favorable interactions between tertiary amines and surrounding hexane or toluene molecules induce aminopolymer conformations that maximize the density of external tertiary moieties rather than active primary or secondary amines but this observation could also arise partially from solvent interactions with PPI that affect observed chemical shifts. The apparent aminopolymer conformational changes to favor external tertiary amine moieties aid in rationalizing lower amine efficiencies in toluene and hexanes than in MeOH, water, and MeCN for 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr).
Finally, though N2 physisorption adsorption–desorption isotherms and NLDFT pore size distributions suggest that PEI and PPI are both hosted within UiO-67(Zr) voids, it remains unclear whether non-specific interactions hinder aminopolymer migration during storage conditions. SEM images (Fig. 7(a), (b) and (e)) of as-synthesized UiO-67(Zr), 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr), and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) show the absence of large aminopolymer domains that would appear as films on the surface of UiO-67(Zr) micro-crystals of average diameter 0.60 ± 0.15 μm, supporting PEI and PPI internal incorporation into UiO-67(Zr). Based on amine efficiencies (Fig. 4), the storage environment that yielded the highest and lowest values are imaged to establish the starkest potential contrast in aminopolymer behavior. For 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr), air (Fig. 7(d)) confers the highest measured amine efficiency while hexanes yields the lowest (Fig. 7(c)); yet, no PPI aggregates were observed in either with comparable morphology and agglomeration of UiO-67(Zr) crystals in both air and hexanes. Similarly, 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) stored in acetone (Fig. 7(f)) and MeOH (Fig. 7(g)) do not exhibit large aminopolymer domains and maintain bulk UiO-67(Zr) crystal morphologies. Therefore, PEI and PPI are not only incorporated within the UiO-67(Zr) framework, but also show limited ability to egress, which is promising for CO2 adsorption site retention during longer term storage, especially in air for PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and in MeOH for PEI/UiO-67(Zr).
Overall, 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) demonstrate activity for CO2 adsorption from concentrated 10% CO2 streams simulating point source emissions, but these materials also show efficacy for CO2 uptake from dilute streams (400 ppm CO2) representing direct air capture (DAC). Steady state (3 h) mass-normalized CO2 capacities at 308 K (Fig. 8) are similar between 20 wt% PPI/UiO-67(Zr) (0.42 ± 0.02 mmolCO2 gadsorbent−1) and 20 wt% PEI/UiO-67(Zr) (0.38 ± 0.02 mmolCO2 gadsorbent−1), consistent with trends observed for concentrated 10% CO2 streams. However, despite a 250× lower CO2 concentration in the DAC conditions, both materials retain >66% of the CO2 capacity and >68% of the amine efficiency observed under simulated flue gas conditions. As such, accessible amine sites in PEI and PPI demonstrate high affinity for CO2, even at dilute concentrations, and indicate the potential of these composite aminopolymer/UiO-67(Zr) adsorbent systems for practical air capture processes.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ma01020h |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |