Photochemically‐Driven CO2 Release Using a Metastable‐State Photoacid for Energy Efficient Direct Air Capture

Author:

Premadasa Uvinduni I.1ORCID,Bocharova Vera1ORCID,Miles Audrey R.12ORCID,Stamberga Diana1ORCID,Belony Stella13ORCID,Bryantsev Vyacheslav S.1ORCID,Elgattar Adnan4ORCID,Liao Yi4ORCID,Damron Joshua T.1ORCID,Kidder Michelle K.5ORCID,Doughty Benjamin1ORCID,Custelcean Radu1ORCID,Ma Ying‐Zhong1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Chemical Sciences Division Oak Ridge National Laboratory P.O. Box 2008 Oak Ridge TN 37831 USA

2. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of Notre Dame Notre Dame IN 46556 USA

3. Department of Chemical Engineering University of Florida Gainesville FL 32611 USA

4. Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering Florida Institute of Technology Melbourne FL 32901 USA

5. Manufacturing Science Division Oak Ridge National Laboratory P.O. Box 2008 Oak Ridge TN 37831 USA

Abstract

AbstractOne of the grand challenges underlying current direct air capture (DAC) technologies relates to the intensive energy cost for sorbent regeneration and CO2 release, making the massive scale (GtCO2/year) deployment required to have a positive impact on climate change economically unfeasible. This challenge underscores the critical need to develop new DAC processes with substantially reduced regeneration energies. Here, we report a photochemically‐driven approach for CO2 release by exploiting the unique properties of an indazole metastable‐state photoacid (mPAH). Our measurements on simulated and amino acid‐based DAC systems revealed the potential of mPAH to be used for CO2 release cycles by regulating pH changes and associated isomers driven by light. Upon irradiating with moderate intensity light, a ≈55 % and ≈68 % to ≈78 % conversion of total inorganic carbon to CO2 was found for the simulated and amino acid‐based DAC systems, respectively. Our results confirm the feasibility of on‐demand CO2 release under ambient conditions using light instead of heat, thereby providing an energy efficient pathway for the regeneration of DAC sorbents.

Funder

Basic Energy Sciences

Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

Reference24 articles.

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5. National Academies of Sciences and Medicine Negative Emissions Technologies and Reliable Sequestration: A Research Agenda The National Academies Press Washington 2019.

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