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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 2024 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39214613

ABSTRACT

Amine-functionalized porous solid materials are effective sorbents for direct air capture (DAC) of CO2. However, they are prone to oxidative degradation in service, increasing the materials cost for widespread implementation. While the identification of oxidation products has given insights into degradation pathways, the roles of some species, like CO2 itself, remain unresolved, with conflicting information in the literature. Here, we investigate the impact of CO2 on the oxidative degradation of poly(ethylenimine)-alumina (PEI/Al2O3) sorbents under conditions encompassing a wide range of CO2-air mixture compositions and temperatures relevant to DAC conditions, thereby reconciling the conflicting data in the literature. Degradation profiles characterized by thermogravimetric analysis, in situ ATR-FTIR, and CO2 capacity measurements reveal nonmonotonic effects of CO2 concentrations and temperatures on oxidation kinetics. Specifically, 0.04% CO2 accelerates PEI/Al2O3 oxidation more at low temperatures (<90 °C) compared to 1% and 5% CO2, but this trend reverses at high temperatures (>90 °C). First-principles metadynamics, machine learning accelerated molecular dynamics simulations, and 1H relaxometry experiments show that chemisorbed CO2 acid-catalyzes critical oxidation reactions, while extensive CO2 uptake reduces PEI branch mobility, slowing radical propagation. These contrasting kinetic effects of CO2 explain the complex degradation profiles observed in this work and in prior literature. Collectively, this work highlights the importance of considering atmospheric components in the design of DAC sorbents and processes. Additionally, it identifies the unconstrained branch mobility and local acid environment as two of the major culprits in the oxidation of amine-based sorbents, suggesting potential strategies to mitigate sorbent degradation.

2.
Small ; 19(6): e2205487, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36470595

ABSTRACT

Metal boride nanostructures have shown significant promise for hydrogen storage applications. However, the synthesis of nanoscale metal boride particles is challenging because of their high surface energy, strong inter- and intraplanar bonding, and difficult-to-control surface termination. Here, it is demonstrated that mechanochemical exfoliation of magnesium diboride in zirconia produces 3-4 nm ultrathin MgB2 nanosheets (multilayers) in high yield. High-pressure hydrogenation of these multilayers at 70 MPa and 330 °C followed by dehydrogenation at 390 °C reveals a hydrogen capacity of 5.1 wt%, which is ≈50 times larger than the capacity of bulk MgB2 under the same conditions. This enhancement is attributed to the creation of defective sites by ball-milling and incomplete Mg surface coverage in MgB2 multilayers, which disrupts the stable boron-boron ring structure. The density functional theory calculations indicate that the balance of Mg on the MgB2 nanosheet surface changes as the material hydrogenates, as it is energetically favorable to trade a small number of Mg vacancies in Mg(BH4 )2 for greater Mg coverage on the MgB2 surface. The exfoliation and creation of ultrathin layers is a promising new direction for 2D metal boride/borohydride research with the potential to achieve high-capacity reversible hydrogen storage at more moderate pressures and temperatures.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(5): 4255-4265, 2023 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36683432

ABSTRACT

Hydrogen storage materials form a crucial research topic for future energy utilization employing hydrogen and among those of interest magnesium diboride (MgB2) has shown its prevalence. In this study, a first-principles analytical adsorption model of one hydrogen molecule in the vicinity of various magnesium diboride crystal surfaces was developed in order to obtain surface thermodynamic properties as a function of molecular and lattice properties. Henry's law constant (KH) and isosteric heat of adsorption (ΔHads) indicators of the affinity between a gaseous molecule and a solid surface are thus calculated. The results in this paper not only address questions pertaining to the first stage of hydrogen storage processes but also advance the understanding of physisorption thermodynamics of a neutral molecule (H2) coming in contact with a layered metallic-like surface (MgB2). Although the model is built from a framework of classical calculations, quantum effects are incorporated as the fractional charge of the ions on the free surfaces, which is essential for the calculation of analytic thermodynamic values that approximate calculations from other methods. To benchmark our theoretical models, periodic density functional calculations were performed to determine the interactions between H2 and different MgB2 surfaces from first-principles. By considering both the top and sublayers of MgB2 in calculating interaction energy, we have analytically and computationally calculated the interaction energies of H2 molecules and MgB2's terminated planes, and witnessed the strong dependence of interaction energies on surface charges. We have also observed a dipole flipping phenomenon which explains the discontinuity seen in the interaction energy graph of Mg(0001). Both analytical and computational results showed heat of adsorption at zero coverage varying at a very low range (<7 kJ mol-1).

4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(49): 25815-25824, 2021 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34459093

ABSTRACT

The highly unfavorable thermodynamics of direct aluminum hydrogenation can be overcome by stabilizing alane within a nanoporous bipyridine-functionalized covalent triazine framework (AlH3 @CTF-bipyridine). This material and the counterpart AlH3 @CTF-biphenyl rapidly desorb H2 between 95 and 154 °C, with desorption complete at 250 °C. Sieverts measurements, 27 Al MAS NMR and 27 Al{1 H} REDOR experiments, and computational spectroscopy reveal that AlH3 @CTF-bipyridine dehydrogenation is reversible at 60 °C under 700 bar hydrogen, >10 times lower pressure than that required to hydrogenate bulk aluminum. DFT calculations and EPR measurements support an unconventional mechanism whereby strong AlH3 binding to bipyridine results in single-electron transfer to form AlH2 (AlH3 )n clusters. The resulting size-dependent charge redistribution alters the dehydrogenation/rehydrogenation thermochemistry, suggesting a novel strategy to enable reversibility in high-capacity metal hydrides.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(10): 4807-4819, 2020 Mar 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32053365

ABSTRACT

We combine experiment and theory to investigate the cooperation or competition between organic and inorganic structure-directing agents (SDAs) for occupancy within microporous voids of chabazite (CHA) zeolites and to rationalize the effects of SDA siting on biasing the framework Al arrangement (Al-O(-Si-O)x-Al, x = 1-3) among CHA zeolites of essentially fixed composition (Si/Al = 15). CHA zeolites crystallized using mixtures of TMAda+ and Na+ contain one TMAda+ occluded per cage and Na+ co-occluded in an amount linearly proportional to the number of 6-MR paired Al sites, quantified by Co2+ titration. In contrast, CHA zeolites crystallized using mixtures of TMAda+ and K+ provide evidence that three K+ cations, on average, displace one TMAda+ from occupying a cage and contain predominantly 6-MR isolated Al sites. Moreover, CHA crystallizes from synthesis media containing more than 10-fold higher inorganic-to-organic ratios with K+ than with Na+ before competing crystalline phases form, providing a route to decrease the amount of organic SDA needed to crystallize high-silica CHA. Density functional theory calculations show that differences in the ionic radii of Na+ and K+ determine their preferences for siting in different CHA rings, which influences their energy to co-occlude with TMAda+ and stabilize different Al configurations. Monte Carlo models confirm that energy differences resulting from Na+ or K+ co-occlusion promote the formation of 6-MR and 8-MR paired Al arrangements, respectively. These results highlight opportunities to exploit using mixtures of organic and inorganic SDAs during zeolite crystallization in order to more efficiently use organic SDAs and influence framework Al arrangements.

6.
Environ Sci Technol ; 53(13): 7551-7563, 2019 07 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31244058

ABSTRACT

Pd-catalyzed reduction has emerged as a promising treatment strategy to remove the recalcitrant disinfection byproduct N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA). However, the reaction pathways remain unexplored, and questions remain about how water solvent influences NDMA reduction mechanisms and selectivity. Here, we compute the energies and barriers of all relevant elementary steps in NDMA reduction by H2 on Pd(111) using density functional theory. We further calculate water-assisted H-shuttling for all hydrogenation reactions explicitly and include water solvation for all elementary reactions implicitly. We parametrize microkinetic models to predict product formation rates and selectivities over a wide range of NDMA concentrations. We show that H2O-mediated H-shuttling lowers the reaction barriers for all hydrogenation reactions involved in NDMA reduction while implicit solvation has negligible impact on the reaction and activation energies. We further conduct batch experiments with SiO2-supported Pd nanoparticles and compare them with the microkinetic models. The predicted rates, selectivity, and apparent activation energy from the model parametrized with both explicit H2O-mediated H-shuttling and implicit solvation correspond well with experimental observations. Models that ignore water as an H-shuttle or solvent fail to recover the experimental rates and apparent activation energy. We identified the rate-determining steps of the reaction and show the reaction flow pathways of the complicated reaction network. Finally, we demonstrate that water-mediated H-shuttling changes the rate-determining steps and reaction flows of elementary reactions.


Subject(s)
Water Pollutants, Chemical , Water Purification , Dimethylnitrosamine , Disinfection , Silicon Dioxide , Water
7.
Chem Sci ; 15(33): 13173-13180, 2024 Aug 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39183896

ABSTRACT

Direct air capture of CO2 using supported amines provides a promising means to achieve the net-zero greenhouse gas emissions goal; however, many mechanistic details regarding the CO2 adsorption process in condensed phase amines remain poorly understood. This work combines machine learning potentials, enhanced sampling and grand-canonical Monte Carlo simulations to directly compute experimentally relevant quantities to elucidate the mechanism of CO2 chemisorption in liquid ammonia as a model system. Our simulations suggest that CO2 capture in the liquid occurs in a sequential fashion, with the formation of a metastable zwitterion intermediate. Furthermore, we identified the importance of solvent-mediated proton transfer and solvent dynamics, not only in the reaction pathway but also in the efficiency of CO2 chemisorption. Beyond liquid ammonia, the methodology presented here can be readily extended to simulate amines with more complex chemical structures under experimental conditions, paving the way to elucidate the structure-performance of amines for CO2 capture.

8.
ChemSusChem ; 16(5): e202201908, 2023 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36508481

ABSTRACT

Amine-based adsorbents are promising for direct air capture of CO2 , yet oxidative degradation remains a key unmitigated risk hindering wide-scale deployment. Borrowing wisdom from the basic auto-oxidation scheme, insights are gained into the underlying degradation mechanisms of polyamines by quantum chemical, advanced sampling simulations, adsorbent synthesis, and accelerated degradation experiments. The reaction kinetics of polyamines are contrasted with that of typical aliphatic polymers and they elucidate for the first time the critical role of aminoalkyl hydroperoxide decomposition in the oxidative degradation of amino-oligomers. The experimentally observed variation in oxidative stability of polyamines with different backbone structures is explained by the relationship between the local chemical structure and the free energy barrier of aminoalkyl hydroperoxide decomposition, suggesting that its energetics can be used as a descriptor to screen and design new polyamines with improved stability. The developed computational capability sheds light on radical-induced degradation chemistry of other organic functional materials.

9.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(40): 46790-46802, 2023 Oct 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37774150

ABSTRACT

Aminopolymer-based sorbents are preferred materials for extraction of CO2 from ambient air [direct air capture (DAC) of CO2] owing to their high CO2 adsorption capacity and selectivity at ultra-dilute conditions. While those adsorptive properties are important, the stability of a sorbent is a key element in developing high-performing, cost-effective, and long-lasting sorbents that can be deployed at scale. Along with process upsets, environmental components such as CO2, O2, and H2O may contribute to long-term sorbent instability. As such, unraveling the complex effects of such atmospheric components on the sorbent lifetime as they appear in the environment is a critical step to understanding sorbent deactivation mechanisms and designing more effective sorbents and processes. Here, a poly(ethylenimine) (PEI)/Al2O3 sorbent is assessed over continuous and cyclic dry and humid conditions to determine the effect of the copresence of CO2 and O2 on stability at an intermediate temperature of 70 °C. Thermogravimetric and elemental analyses in combination with in situ horizontal attenuated total reflection infrared (HATR-IR) spectroscopy are performed to measure the extent of deactivation, elemental content, and molecular level changes in the sorbent due to deactivation. The thermal/thermogravimetric analysis results reveal that incorporating CO2 with O2 accelerates sorbent deactivation using these sorbents in dry and humid conditions compared to that using CO2-free air in similar conditions. The in situ HATR-IR spectroscopy results of PEI/Al2O3 sorbent deactivation under a CO2-air environment show the formation of primary amine species in higher quantity (compared to that in conditions without O2 or CO2), which arises due to the C-N bond cleavage at secondary amines due to oxidative degradation. We hypothesize that the formation of bound CO2 species such as carbamic acids catalyzes C-N cleavage reactions in the oxidative degradation pathway by shuttling protons, resulting in a low activation energy barrier for degradation, as probed by metadynamics simulations. In the cyclic experiment after 30 cycles, results show a gradual loss in stability (dry: 29%, humid: 52%) under CO2-containing air (0.04% CO2/21% O2 balance N2). However, the loss in capacity during cyclic studies is significantly less than that during continuous deactivation, as expected.

10.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 59(72): 10737-10740, 2023 Sep 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37560785

ABSTRACT

Free energy sampling, deep potential molecular dynamics, and characterizations provide insights into the impact of epoxide-functionalization on the hydrogen bonding and mobility of poly(ethylenimine), a promising CO2 sorbent. These findings rationalize the anti-degradation effects of epoxide functionalization and open up new avenues for designing more durable CO2 sorbents.

11.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(18): 20430-20442, 2022 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35319201

ABSTRACT

Solid-state hydrogen storage materials often operate via transient, multistep chemical reactions at complex interfaces that are difficult to capture. Here, we use direct ab initio molecular dynamics simulations at accelerated temperatures and hydrogen pressures to probe the hydrogenation chemistry of the candidate material MgB2 without a priori assumption of reaction pathways. Focusing on highly reactive (101̅0) edge planes where initial hydrogen attack is likely to occur, we track mechanistic steps toward the formation of hydrogen-saturated BH4- units and key chemical intermediates, involving H2 dissociation, generation of functionalities and molecular complexes containing BH2 and BH3 motifs, and B-B bond breaking. The genesis of higher-order boron clustering is also observed. Different charge states and chemical environments at the B-rich and Mg-rich edge planes are found to produce different chemical pathways and preferred speciation, with implications for overall hydrogenation kinetics. The reaction processes rely on B-H bond polarization and fluctuations between ionic and covalent character, which are critically enabled by the presence of Mg2+ cations in the nearby interphase region. Our results provide guidance for devising kinetic improvement strategies for MgB2-based hydrogen storage materials, while also providing a template for exploring chemical pathways in other solid-state energy storage reactions.

12.
ACS Nano ; 15(6): 10163-10174, 2021 Jun 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34029480

ABSTRACT

A general problem when designing functional nanomaterials for energy storage is the lack of control over the stability and reactivity of metastable phases. Using the high-capacity hydrogen storage candidate LiAlH4 as an exemplar, we demonstrate an alternative approach to the thermodynamic stabilization of metastable metal hydrides by coordination to nitrogen binding sites within the nanopores of N-doped CMK-3 carbon (NCMK-3). The resulting LiAlH4@NCMK-3 material releases H2 at temperatures as low as 126 °C with full decomposition below 240 °C, bypassing the usual Li3AlH6 intermediate observed in bulk. Moreover, >80% of LiAlH4 can be regenerated under 100 MPa H2, a feat previously thought to be impossible. Nitrogen sites are critical to these improvements, as no reversibility is observed with undoped CMK-3. Density functional theory predicts a drastically reduced Al-H bond dissociation energy and supports the observed change in the reaction pathway. The calculations also provide a rationale for the solid-state reversibility, which derives from the combined effects of nanoconfinement, Li adatom formation, and charge redistribution between the metal hydride and the host.

13.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 6268, 2021 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34725350

ABSTRACT

Layered boron compounds have attracted significant interest in applications from energy storage to electronic materials to device applications, owing in part to a diversity of surface properties tied to specific arrangements of boron atoms. Here we report the energy landscape for surface atomic configurations of MgB2 by combining first-principles calculations, global optimization, material synthesis and characterization. We demonstrate that contrary to previous assumptions, multiple disordered reconstructions are thermodynamically preferred and kinetically accessible within exposed B surfaces in MgB2 and other layered metal diborides at low boron chemical potentials. Such a dynamic environment and intrinsic disordering of the B surface atoms present new opportunities to realize a diverse set of 2D boron structures. We validated the predicted surface disorder by characterizing exfoliated boron-terminated MgB2 nanosheets. We further discuss application-relevant implications, with a particular view towards understanding the impact of boron surface heterogeneity on hydrogen storage performance.

14.
Science ; 357(6354): 898-903, 2017 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28818971

ABSTRACT

Copper ions exchanged into zeolites are active for the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) of nitrogen oxides (NO x ) with ammonia (NH3), but the low-temperature rate dependence on copper (Cu) volumetric density is inconsistent with reaction at single sites. We combine steady-state and transient kinetic measurements, x-ray absorption spectroscopy, and first-principles calculations to demonstrate that under reaction conditions, mobilized Cu ions can travel through zeolite windows and form transient ion pairs that participate in an oxygen (O2)-mediated CuI→CuII redox step integral to SCR. Electrostatic tethering to framework aluminum centers limits the volume that each ion can explore and thus its capacity to form an ion pair. The dynamic, reversible formation of multinuclear sites from mobilized single atoms represents a distinct phenomenon that falls outside the conventional boundaries of a heterogeneous or homogeneous catalyst.

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