| Literature DB >> 28800566 |
Jung Woon Yoon1, Tae-Ung Yoon1, Eun-Jung Kim2, Ah-Reum Kim1, Tae-Sung Jung3, Sang-Sup Han3, Youn-Sang Bae4.
Abstract
Cu(I) species were successfully chelated to nitrogen atoms in a nitrogen-rich porous organic polymer (SNW-1) by mixing with a CuCl solution (Scheme 1). Although pristine SNW-1 adsorbs CO2 better than CO, Cu(I)-incorporated SNW-1 (nCu(I)@SNW-1) shows selective CO adsorption over CO2 because of the π-complexation of CO with Cu(I). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first CO/CO2 selectivity observed for POP-based materials. 1.3Cu(I)@SNW-1 exhibits high CO/CO2 selectivity (23) at 1bar and a large CO working capacity (0.6mmol/g) at 0.1-1bar. Moreover, the breakthrough and thermogravimetric experiments show that 1.3Cu(I)@SNW-1 can effectively separate CO from CO2 under dynamic mixture conditions and can be easily regenerated under mild regeneration conditions without heating the column. Furthermore, 1.3Cu(I)@SNW-1 exhibited a good stability under exposure to atmospheric air for 3h or 9h. These results suggest that chelating Cu(I) species to a nitrogen-rich porous organic polymer can be an efficient strategy to separate and recover CO from CO/CO2 mixtures.Entities:
Keywords: Adsorbent; Adsorption equilibrium; CO; CO(2); Chelate; Cu(I); PSA; Porous organic polymer; Separation; π-complexation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28800566 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2017.07.065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588