TY - JOUR
T1 - Tuning CO2 separation of Type I UiO-66 porous liquids by varying the size of porous hosts
AU - Long, Shuangshuang
AU - Wang, Jingwen
AU - Meng, Shuqian
AU - Liu, Yaxin
AU - Zhang, Jing
AU - Ren, Zihao
AU - Li, Jiadi
AU - Xin, Yangyang
AU - Dong, Zheng
AU - Cui, Baolu
AU - Qian, Libing
AU - Zhou, Wenwu
AU - Hu, Kai
AU - Wang, Luyao
AU - Li, Peipei
AU - Zheng, Yaping
AU - Yang, Zhiyuan
AU - Wang, Dechao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2026. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2026/6
Y1 - 2026/6
N2 - Porous liquids (PLs), combine the high adsorption capacity of porous solids with the fluidity of liquids, show great promise in selective CO2 capture. However, current studies on Type I PLs lacks systematic investigations into the regulatory role of porous host particle size and its impact on in-depth analysis of the gas sorption-separation process. Herein, we successfully fabricated PLs by grafting polyether amine oligomer chains onto the surface of size-tailored UiO-66-OH as the porous host, which endow the PLs with good thermal stability, transparency, low viscosity, and promising CO2/N2 separation. UiO-66-OH-PLs were fabricated by grafting polyether amine oligomer steric solvent onto UiO-66-OH via dehydrative condensation. The effect of porous host size on CO2 separation behavior of UiO-66-OH-PLs and the selective sorption-separation mechanism were systematically investigated using sorption isotherm and kinetic models. UiO-66-OH-PLs exhibit markedly enhanced CO2 sorption capacity relative to the pure steric solvent, confirming the preservation of accessible cavities in porous hosts. The PLs further exhibit distinct size-dependent physicochemical and sorption properties as decreasing the particle size of UiO-66-OH porous hosts increases oligomer grafting density, reduces bulk viscosity and enhances both CO2 sorption capacity and CO2/N2 separation selectivity. CO2 adsorption isotherms are best fitted by the SS-Langmuir-Freundlich model, indicating that CO2 sorption by UiO-66-OH-PLs is single-component sorption on heterogeneous surfaces, integrating Langmuir monolayer sorption and Freundlich non-ideal sorption characteristics. Kinetic analysis reveals that the optimal pseudo-first-order kinetic model, demonstrating that CO2 sorption rate is dominated by the sorption-desorption process between adsorbate molecules and adsorbent surface-active sites, rather than intraparticle or liquid film diffusion. This work opens up a promising avenue for the rational design of high-performance PLs that can be tailored to meet the demands of practical industrial chemical separation processes.
AB - Porous liquids (PLs), combine the high adsorption capacity of porous solids with the fluidity of liquids, show great promise in selective CO2 capture. However, current studies on Type I PLs lacks systematic investigations into the regulatory role of porous host particle size and its impact on in-depth analysis of the gas sorption-separation process. Herein, we successfully fabricated PLs by grafting polyether amine oligomer chains onto the surface of size-tailored UiO-66-OH as the porous host, which endow the PLs with good thermal stability, transparency, low viscosity, and promising CO2/N2 separation. UiO-66-OH-PLs were fabricated by grafting polyether amine oligomer steric solvent onto UiO-66-OH via dehydrative condensation. The effect of porous host size on CO2 separation behavior of UiO-66-OH-PLs and the selective sorption-separation mechanism were systematically investigated using sorption isotherm and kinetic models. UiO-66-OH-PLs exhibit markedly enhanced CO2 sorption capacity relative to the pure steric solvent, confirming the preservation of accessible cavities in porous hosts. The PLs further exhibit distinct size-dependent physicochemical and sorption properties as decreasing the particle size of UiO-66-OH porous hosts increases oligomer grafting density, reduces bulk viscosity and enhances both CO2 sorption capacity and CO2/N2 separation selectivity. CO2 adsorption isotherms are best fitted by the SS-Langmuir-Freundlich model, indicating that CO2 sorption by UiO-66-OH-PLs is single-component sorption on heterogeneous surfaces, integrating Langmuir monolayer sorption and Freundlich non-ideal sorption characteristics. Kinetic analysis reveals that the optimal pseudo-first-order kinetic model, demonstrating that CO2 sorption rate is dominated by the sorption-desorption process between adsorbate molecules and adsorbent surface-active sites, rather than intraparticle or liquid film diffusion. This work opens up a promising avenue for the rational design of high-performance PLs that can be tailored to meet the demands of practical industrial chemical separation processes.
KW - CO/N separation
KW - Kinetic Model
KW - Porous liquids
KW - Size-regulation
KW - UiO-66-OH
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105034381119
U2 - 10.1016/j.jece.2026.122436
DO - 10.1016/j.jece.2026.122436
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105034381119
SN - 2213-3437
VL - 14
JO - Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering
JF - Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering
IS - 3
M1 - 122436
ER -