“Sponges With Covalently Tethered Amines for High-Efficiency Carbon
Capture” Genggeng Qi and Liling Fu, Dec. 12 in Nature Communications.

http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/2014/12/carbon-trapping-sponges-can-cut-greenhouse-gases

Carbon-trapping 'sponges' can cut greenhouse gases

ByAnne Ju

In the fight against global warming, carbon capture – chemically trapping
carbon dioxide before it releases into the atmosphere – is gaining
momentum, but standard methods are plagued by toxicity, corrosiveness and
inefficiency. Using a bag of chemistry tricks, Cornell materials scientists
have invented low-toxicity, highly effective carbon-trapping “sponges” that
could lead to increased use of the technology.

A research team led by Emmanuel Giannelis, the Walter R. Read Professor of
Engineering in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, has
invented a powder that performs as well or better than industry benchmarks
for carbon capture.

Used in natural gas and coal-burning plants, the most common carbon capture
method today is called amine scrubbing, in which post-combustion, carbon
dioxide-containing flue gas passes through liquid vats of amino compounds,
or amines, which absorb most of the carbon dioxide. The carbon-rich gas is
then pumped away – sequestered – or reused. The amine solution is extremely
corrosive and requires capital-intensive containment.The researchers have
been working on a better, safer carbon-capture method since about 2008, and
they have gone through several iterations. Their latest consists of a
silica scaffold, the sorbent support, with nanoscale pores for maximum
surface area. They dip the scaffold into liquid amine, which soaks into the
support like a sponge and partially hardens. The finished product is a
stable, dry white powder that captures carbon dioxide even in the presence
of moisture.

Solid amine sorbents are used in carbon capture, Giannelis said, but the
supports are usually only physically impregnated with the amines. Over time
some of the amine is lost, decreasing effectiveness and increasing cost.The
researchers instead grew their amine onto the sorbent surface, which causes
the amine to chemically bond to the sorbents, meaning very little amine
loss over time.Qi said the next steps are to optimize the sorbent and to
eventually demonstrate it for industry, possibly at Cornell for
retrofitting its power plant. He also said the technology could be used on
smaller scale – for example, in greenhouses, where the captured carbon
dioxide can be used to enhance plant growth.

KyuJung Whang, Cornell’s vice president for facilities services, heard a
presentation by Giannelis on the topic at a board of trustees meeting
earlier this year.“We have made great strides in sustainability,
particularly in the energy supply areas of alternative energy sources, and
the demand side areas of energy conservation and building design
standards,” Whang said. “If we are truly to achieve neutrality, though, we
also have to consider capturing and offsetting carbon. Emmanuel’s
presentation got my attention, and I was hoping to learn more about it and
explore ways we might be able to work together.”

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