CO Chemisorption Behavior in Conjugated Carbanion-Derived Ionic Liquids via Carboxylic Acid Formation.

J Am Chem Soc

Department of Chemistry, Institute for Advanced Materials and Manufacturing, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, United States.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Superbase-derived task-specific ionic liquids (STSILs) are effective in carbon capture through chemisorption, with CO uptake capacity closely tied to the basicity of their anions.
  • High energy costs in desorption and unwanted reactions due to strong anion basicity present ongoing challenges in this area.
  • This study introduces carbanion-derived STSILs that enhance CO chemisorption through a new pathway, revealing that the STSIL with deprotonated malononitrile ([MN]) shows superior CO uptake compared to 2-methylmalononitrile ([MMN]), despite being less basic.

Article Abstract

Superbase-derived task-specific ionic liquids (STSILs) represent one of the most attractive and extensively studied systems in carbon capture via chemisorption, in which the obtained CO uptake capacity has a strong relationship with the basicity of the anions. High energy input in desorption and side reactions caused by the strong basicity of the anions are still unsolved issues. The development of other customized STSILs leveraging an alternative driving force to achieve efficient CO chemisorption/desorption is highly desirable yet challenging. In this work, carbanion-derived STSILs were developed for efficient CO chemisorption via a carboxylic acid formation pathway. The STSIL with the deprotonated malononitrile molecule ([MN]) as the anion exhibited much higher CO uptake capacity than the one derived from 2-methylmalononitrile ([MMN]). Notably, this trend was opposite to their basicity ([MN] < [MMN]). Detailed characterization of the products, supported by density functional theory simulations of spectra and calculations of the reaction energetics, demonstrated that carboxylic acid was formed upon reacting with CO via proton transfer in [MN]-derived STSILs but not in the case of [MMN] due to lack of an α-H. The preference of the carboxylic acid product over carboxylate formation was driven by the extended conjugation among the central sp carbon, the as-formed carboxylic acid, and the two nitrile groups. The achievements made in this work provide an alternative design principle of STSILs by leveraging the extended conjugation in the CO-integrated product.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c09189DOI Listing

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