Foam Filter
Figure 1. A sample of the new material resting on a flower, demonstrating its extremely low weight. Source: Luis Valencia.
“This research fits well with the ongoing developments within CCS [carbon capture and storage] and CCU [carbon capture and utilization] technology, as a sustainable alternative with great potential. In addition to bio-based materials being more environmentally friendly, the material is a solid — once the carbon dioxide has been captured, it is therefore easier and more efficient to separate it than from the liquid amine solutions,” says Anders Palmqvist, research leader at Chalmers.
Amines used in CCS technology have several problems, such as the volume required, their corrosive nature, and the amount of energy needed to separate the captured carbon dioxide from the amine solution, points out Palmqvist. The new material avoids all these issues and could well be used in easy-to-manufacture filter applications, he suggests.
Meanwhile, the Swiss work focuses on overcoming the problem that materials good at capturing carbon dioxide tend also to be good at capturing water — making them useless with wet flue gases.
Chemical engineers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Techonology Laussane (École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, EPFL) have designed a material that can capture carbon dioxide from wet flue gases better than current commercial materials. They describe their work in a recent article in Nature.
Research lead Berend Smit, a professor in the molecular simulation laboratory at EPFL, calls the work a breakthrough for computational materials design because the scientists used an out-of-the-box approach more typically applied in drug discovery — they treated carbon dioxide in the same way that pharmaceutical companies treat a disease.
Pharmaceutical companies typically test millions of molecules to find ones that bind to a target protein related to the disease in question. The molecules that bind are then analyzed to detect any common structural properties that will form the basis for designing and synthesizing new drug molecules.
The EPFL scientists computer-generated 325,000 materials whose common motif is the ability to bind carbon dioxide. All the materials are MOFs that have been the focus of Smit’s research for many years.
The team then looked for structural similarities among the MOFs that preferentially bind carbon dioxide over water. Adding parameters of selectivity further narrowed the subclass. Finally, the researchers’ MOF-generation algorithm settled on 35 materials that show better carbon dioxide capturing ability from wet flue-gas than current commercially available materials.
The Research Centre for Carbon Solutions at Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, Scotland; U.S. Department of Energy Center for Gas Separations Relevant to Clean Energy Technologies, Berkeley, Calif.; and the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, also in Berkeley, confirmed their findings.
“What makes this work stand out is that we were also able to synthesize these materials,” says Smit. “That allowed us to work with our colleagues to show that the MOFs actually adsorb carbon dioxide and not water, actually test them for carbon capture, and compare them with existing commercial materials.”