- Zhu, Ziting;
- Parker, Surya;
- Forse, Alexander;
- Lee, Jung-Hoon;
- Siegelman, Rebecca;
- Milner, Phillip;
- Tsai, Hsinhan;
- Ye, Mengshan;
- Paley, Maria;
- Uliana, Adam;
- Oktawiec, Julia;
- Dinakar, Bhavish;
- Didas, Stephanie;
- Meihaus, Katie;
- Long, Jeffrey;
- Neaton, Jeffrey;
- Reimer, Jeffrey;
- Xiong, Shuoyan
Diamine-appended Mg2(dobpdc) (dobpdc4- = 4,4-dioxidobiphenyl-3,3-dicarboxylate) metal-organic frameworks have emerged as promising candidates for carbon capture owing to their exceptional CO2 selectivities, high separation capacities, and step-shaped adsorption profiles, which arise from a unique cooperative adsorption mechanism resulting in the formation of ammonium carbamate chains. Materials appended with primary,secondary-diamines featuring bulky substituents, in particular, exhibit excellent stabilities and CO2 adsorption properties. However, these frameworks display double-step adsorption behavior arising from steric repulsion between ammonium carbamates, which ultimately results in increased regeneration energies. Herein, we report frameworks of the type diamine-Mg2(olz) (olz4- = (E)-5,5-(diazene-1,2-diyl)bis(2-oxidobenzoate)) that feature diverse diamines with bulky substituents and display desirable single-step CO2 adsorption across a wide range of pressures and temperatures. Analysis of CO2 adsorption data reveals that the basicity of the pore-dwelling amine─in addition to its steric bulk─is an important factor influencing adsorption step pressure; furthermore, the amine steric bulk is found to be inversely correlated with the degree of cooperativity in CO2 uptake. One material, ee-2-Mg2(olz) (ee-2 = N,N-diethylethylenediamine), adsorbs >90% of the CO2 from a simulated coal flue stream and exhibits exceptional thermal and oxidative stability over the course of extensive adsorption/desorption cycling, placing it among top-performing adsorbents to date for CO2 capture from a coal flue gas. Spectroscopic characterization and van der Waals-corrected density functional theory calculations indicate that diamine-Mg2(olz) materials capture CO2 via the formation of ammonium carbamate chains. These results point more broadly to the opportunity for fundamentally advancing materials in this class through judicious design.