Surpassing the Performance of Phenolate-derived Ionic Liquids in CO2 Chemisorption by Harnessing the Robust Nature of Pyrazolonates

Liqi Qiu, Yuqing Fu, Zhenzhen Yang, Anna C. Johnson, Chi Linh Do-Thanh, Bishnu P. Thapaliya, Shannon M. Mahurin, Liang Nian He, De en Jiang, Sheng Dai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Superbase-derived ionic liquids (SILs) are promising sorbents to tackle the carbon challenge featured by tunable interaction strength with CO2 via structural engineering, particularly the oxygenate-derived counterparts (e. g., phenolate). However, for the widely deployed phenolate-derived SILs, unsolved stability issues severely limited their applications leading to unfavorable and diminished CO2 chemisorption performance caused by ylide formation-involved side reactions and the phenolate-quinone transformation via auto-oxidation. In this work, robust pyrazolonate-derived SILs possessing anti-oxidation nature were developed by introducing aza-fused rings in the oxygenate-derived anions, which delivered promising and tunable CO2 uptake capacity surpassing the phenolate-based SIL via a carbonate formation pathway (O−C bond formation), as illustrated by detailed spectroscopy studies. Further theoretical calculations and experimental comparisons demonstrated the more favorable reaction enthalpy and improved anti-oxidation properties of the pyrazolonate-derived SILs compared with phenolate anions. The achievements being made in this work provides a promising approach to achieve efficient carbon capture by combining the benefits of strong interaction strength of oxygenate species with CO2 and the stability improvement enabled by aza-fused rings introduction.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202301329
JournalChemSusChem
Volume17
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 22 2024

Funding

The research was supported financially by the Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, US Department of Energy.

Keywords

  • CO Chemisorption
  • Carbon Dioxide Capture
  • Carbonate Formation
  • Pyrazolonate anion
  • Superbase-derived Ionic Liquids

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