Abstract
Nanoporous adsorbent materials are a key part of many industrial processes, including the rapidly-expanding carbon capture industry. Development of advanced sorbents requires an assessment of the sorbent’s performance under mixed-gas conditions. Existing measurement techniques tend to be slow, material-intensive, and have limited ability to measure competitive mixed-gas sorption. We have developed a novel technique that measures thin films of sorbents deposited onto sensitive micro-electromechanical system (MEMS) transducers. This technique is fast, requires very little material, and enables real-time monitoring of binary gas sorption. We report measurements of CO2/H2O mixed-gas isotherms at three different temperatures on the carbon capture MOF CALF-20. The measured experimental data on CO2/H2O mixture adsorption in CALF-20 demonstrate the severe limitations of the Ideal Adsorbed Solution Theory (IAST) in providing a quantitative estimation of the component loadings. Departures from the IAST are quantified by introduction of activity coefficients and use of the Real Adsorbed Solution Theory (RAST).
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