Highly Cooperative CO2 Adsorption via a Cation Crowding Mechanism on a Cesium-Exchanged Phillipsite Zeolite

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2023 Sep 4;62(36):e202305816. doi: 10.1002/anie.202305816. Epub 2023 Jun 30.

Abstract

An understanding of the CO2 adsorption mechanisms on small-pore zeolites is of practical importance in the development of more efficient adsorbents for the separation of CO2 from N2 or CH4 . Here we report that the CO2 isotherms at 25-75 °C on cesium-exchanged phillipsite zeolite with a Si/Al ratio of 2.5 (Cs-PHI-2.5) are characterized by a rectilinear step shape: limited uptake at low CO2 pressure (PCO2 ) is followed by highly cooperative uptake at a critical pressure, above which adsorption rapidly approaches capacity (2.0 mmol g-1 ). Structural analysis reveals that this isotherm behavior is attributed to the high concentration and large size of Cs+ ions in dehydrated Cs-PHI-2.5. This results in Cs+ cation crowding and subsequent dispersal at a critical loading of CO2 , which allows the PHI framework to relax to its wide pore form and enables its pores to fill with CO2 over a very narrow range of PCO2 . Such a highly cooperative phenomenon has not been observed for other zeolites.

Keywords: Aluminosilicates; Carbon Dioxide Adsorption; Crowding Mechanism; Structure Elucidation; Zeolites.