Carbon capture and storage is an important strategy for stabilizing the increasing concentration of atmospheric CO and the global temperature. A possible approach toward reversing this trend and decreasing the atmospheric CO concentration is to remove the CO directly from air (direct air capture). Herein we report a simple aqueous guanidine sorbent that captures CO from ambient air and binds it as a crystalline carbonate salt by guanidinium hydrogen bonding. The resulting solid has very low aqueous solubility (K =1.0(4)×10 ), which facilitates its separation from solution by filtration. The bound CO can be released by relatively mild heating of the crystals at 80-120 °C, which regenerates the guanidine sorbent quantitatively. Thus, this crystallization-based approach to CO separation from air requires minimal energy and chemical input, and offers the prospect for low-cost direct air capture technologies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.201610916 | DOI Listing |
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