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New
Materials Can Selectively Capture Carbon Dioxide, UCLA Chemists
Report
Thursday, February 14, 2008
ZIFs
and their crystal structures
ZIFs
are a new class of materials designed by Omar Yaghi and his
UCLA group.
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Credit:
UCLA
The scientists have
demonstrated that they can successfully isolate and capture
carbon dioxide, which contributes to global warming, rising sea
levels and the increased acidity of oceans. Their findings could
lead to power plants efficiently capturing carbon dioxide without
using toxic materials.
"The technical challenge
of selectively removing carbon dioxide has been overcome,"
said Omar M. Yaghi, UCLA's Christopher S. Foote Professor of
Chemistry and co-author of the Science paper. "Now we have
structures that can be tailored precisely to capture carbon
dioxide and store it like a reservoir, as we have demonstrated.
No carbon dioxide escapes. Nothing escapes — unless
you want it to do so. We believe this to be a turning point in
capturing carbon dioxide before it reaches the atmosphere."
The carbon dioxide is captured
using a new class of materials designed by Yaghi and his group
called zeolitic imidazolate frameworks, or ZIFs. These are porous
and chemically robust structures, with large surface areas, that
can be heated to high temperatures without decomposition and
boiled in water or organic solvents for a week and still remain
stable.
Rahul Banerjee, a UCLA
postdoctoral research scholar in chemistry and Anh Phan, a UCLA
graduate student in chemistry, both of whom work in Yaghi's
laboratory, synthesized 25 ZIF crystal structures and
demonstrated that three of them have high selectivity for
capturing carbon dioxide (ZIF-68, ZIF-69, ZIF-70).
"The selectivity of ZIFs
to carbon dioxide is unparalleled by any other material,"
said Yaghi, who directs of UCLA's Center for Reticular Chemistry
and is a member of the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA.
"Rahul and Anh were so successful at making new ZIFs that,
for the purposes of reporting the results, I had to ask them to
stop."
The inside of a ZIF can store
gas molecules. Flaps that behave like the chemical equivalent of
a revolving door allow certain molecules — in this
case, carbon dioxide — to pass through and enter the
reservoir while blocking larger molecules or molecules of
different shapes.
"We can screen and select
the one type of molecule we want to capture," Phan said.
"The beauty of the chemistry is that we have the freedom to
choose what kind of door we want and to control what goes through
the door."
"The capture of carbon
dioxide creates cleaner energy," Yaghi said. "ZIFs in a
smokestack would trap carbon dioxide in the pores prior to its
delivery to its geologic storage space."
In ZIFs 68, 69 and 70, Banerjee
and Phan emptied the pores, creating an open framework. They then
subjected the material to streams of gases -- carbon dioxide and
carbon monoxide, for example, and another stream of carbon
dioxide and nitrogen — and were able to capture only
the carbon dioxide. They are testing other ZIFs for various
applications.
Carbon dioxide is killing
corral reefs and marine life, damage that will be irreversible,
at least for many centuries, Yaghi noted.
Currently, the process of
capturing carbon dioxide emissions from power plants involves the
use of toxic materials and requires 20 to 30 percent of the
plant's energy output, Yaghi said. By contrast, ZIFs can pluck
carbon dioxide from other gases that are emitted and can store
five times more carbon dioxide than the porous carbon materials
that represent the current state-of-art.
"For each liter of ZIF,
you can hold 83 liters of carbon dioxide," Banerjee said.
The word zif, Yaghi
noted, is used in the Bible to describe a region of splendor. It
also means comeliness and brightness. This name is fitting for
this new class of materials, he said, because its members are
many and of quite beautiful constructions.
On a fundamental level, the
invention of ZIFs has also addressed two major challenges in
zeolite science. Zeolites are stable, porous minerals made of
aluminum, silicon and oxygen that are employed in petroleum
refining and are used in detergents and other products. Yaghi's
group has succeeded in replacing what would have been aluminum or
silicon with metal ions like zinc and cobalt, and the bridging
oxygen with imidazolate to yield ZIF materials, whose structures
can now be designed in functionality and metrics.
Banerjee and Anh automated the
process of synthesis. Instead of mixing the chemicals one
reaction at a time and achieving perhaps several reactions per
day, they were able to perform 200 reactions in less than an
hour. The pair ran 9,600 microreactions and from those reactions
uncovered 25 new structures.
"We keep producing new
crystals of ZIFs every day," Banerjee said. "These
reactions produce crystals that look as beautiful as diamonds."
Co-authors are Bo Wang, a UCLA
graduate student in chemistry in Yaghi's laboratory; Carolyn
Knobler and Hiroyasu Furukawa of the Center for Reticular
Chemistry at the UCLA's California NanoSystems Institute; and
Michael O'Keeffe of Arizona State University's department of
chemistry and biochemistry.
In the early 1990s, Yaghi
invented another class of materials called metal-organic
frameworks (MOFs), which have been described as crystal sponges
and which also have implications for cleaner energy. Yaghi can
change the components of MOFs nearly at will. Like ZIFs, MOFs
have pores — openings on the nanoscale in which Yaghi
and his colleagues can store gases that are usually difficult to
store and transport.
Yaghi's laboratory has made
several hundred MOFs, with a variety of properties and
structures. Molecules can pass in and out of them unobstructed.
BASF, a global chemical company
based in Germany, funded the synthesis of the materials, and the
U.S. Department of Energy funded the absorption and separation
studies of carbon dioxide.
Source:
University of California, Los Angeles

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