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Graphene membranes with High Selectivity improve the efficiency of CO₂ capture
Context: Researchers at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) have recently unveiled innovative graphene membranes that could significantly enhance carbon capture efficiency. These membranes feature pyridinic nitrogen at their pore edges, aiding in the binding of CO₂ to the pores.
Advancing Graphene Membrane Performance for Carbon Capture:
- Objective: Enhance the separation performance of graphene membranes.
- Increase porosity in graphene, improve pore size distribution, and add polymer groups to the pores to improve CO₂/N₂ selectivity and achieve high CO₂ permeance.
- Simple Incorporation Process:
- Pyridinic nitrogen can be incorporated by soaking porous graphene in ammonia.
- This method significantly improves CO₂/N₂ selectivity while maintaining high permeance.
- Achieves extremely high CO₂/N₂ selectivity for dilute CO₂ feed, with factors above 1,000.
- Advantages of the Method:
- Atomic nitrogen introduced as pyridinic nitrogen has a high affinity for CO₂.
- The graphene lattice remains atom-thin, enabling both high selectivity and permeance.
- Challenges: Achieving both high permeance and high selectivity in graphene membranes was difficult.
- Developing high-performance and low-cost membranes for CO₂ capture.
- These challenges have limited the real-world application of carbon capture solutions.
- Future Implications:
- The developed graphene membranes and fabrication approach could enable large-scale carbon capture.
- Researchers are working on scaling up the membranes and simplifying fabrication with roll-to-roll synthesis for future commercialization.