Mitigating atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations is crucial because elevated CO levels drive climate change by enhancing the greenhouse effect, leading to global warming, extreme weather events, ocean acidification, loss of biodiversity, and significant socioeconomic and health challenges for ecosystems and human populations. The necessity to reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide levels has led to the creation of novel materials designed to effectively capture and convert CO using carbon capture and utilization methods. A diverse array of materials such as metal-organic frameworks, covalent organic frameworks, porous carbon, zeolites, and amine functionalized silica has been reported for efficient carbon dioxide capture. Notably, amine-functionalized silica has emerged as one of the most extensively studied materials in the field of carbon dioxide capture. Solid-state NMR is a powerful spectroscopic technique for analyzing amine-based silica adsorbents, as it provides detailed, nondestructive molecular insights into structure, interactions, and adsorption mechanisms that are challenging to resolve using traditional techniques like infrared spectroscopy and BET (Brunauer-Emmett-Teller). Solid-state NMR, particularly magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR, demonstrates significant potential in providing high-resolution insights into atomic-level interactions and dynamics. This minireview will explore how solid-state NMR spectroscopy and its advancements are effective in investigating the amine immobilization and stabilization mechanism on silica, probing the local structures of CO adsorption species, and assessing the influence of varying conditions on the performance of adsorbents. The information obtained through the application of various solid-state NMR experiments is emphasized, along with strategies for further enhancing this knowledge.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.4c11221 | DOI Listing |
Environ Sci Technol
March 2025
NOAA Chemical Sciences Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado 80305, United States.
Despite decades of emission control measures aimed at improving air quality, Los Angeles (LA) continues to experience severe ozone pollution during the summertime. We incorporate cooking volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions in a chemical transport model and evaluate it against observations in order to improve the model representation of the present-day ozone chemical regime in LA. Using this updated model, we investigate the impact of adopting zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs) on ozone pollution with increased confidence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLangmuir
March 2025
Tianjin Building Materials Group (Holding) Corporation, Tianjin 300381, China.
Diethanolamine (DEA) can be used not only as a cement admixture but also to capture carbon dioxide (CO). However, the waste liquid treatment still faces the problems of high energy consumption and increasing environmental burden. The effects of DEA waste liquid (WL-DEA) with multiple cycles of CO absorption and desorption on the setting time, hydration temperature, mechanical strength, and microstructure of cement-based materials were explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
March 2025
Institute for Decarbonization Materials, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, United States.
The efficient removal of CO from exhaust streams and even directly from air is necessary to forestall climate change, lending urgency to the search for new materials that can rapidly capture CO at high capacity. The recent discovery that diamine-appended metal-organic frameworks can exhibit cooperative CO uptake via the formation of ammonium carbamate chains begs the question of whether simple organic polyamine molecules could be designed to achieve a similar switch-like behavior with even higher separation capacities. Here, we present a solid molecular triamine, 1,3,5-tris(aminomethyl)benzene (TriH), that rapidly captures large quantities of CO upon exposure to humid air to form the porous, crystalline, ammonium carbamate network solid TriH(CO)·HO (TriHCO).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste Manag Res
March 2025
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IITD), New Delhi, DL, India.
This research determines the potential impact of reducing food waste on future energy consumption and pollutant emissions. The study uses system dynamics modelling to simulate the complex link between population, food demand, food waste output and their interactions with energy consumption in the food system and carbon dioxide (CO) emissions. Scenarios are developed by considering two elements: a reduction in food waste and an increase in energy output.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Model
March 2025
Departamento de Ciencias Químicas, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Universidad Andres Bello (UNAB), Av. República 275, Santiago, 8370146, Región Metropolitana, Chile.
Context: The conversion of carbon dioxide into methanoic acid through direct hydrogenation with H in the gas phase implies overcoming a high activation energy (more than 60 kcal mol ) that makes the process kinetically infeasible. In this study, the use of the [(PY Me )Mo(III)(H)(OH)] complex instead of H lowered the activation energy of the hydrogenation by 98.5%.
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