Selective separation of CO2–CH4 mixed gases via magnesium aminoethylphosphonate nanoparticles
Abstract
Magnesium 2-aminoethylphosphonate (Mg2O(2AEP) × 4H2O) nanoparticles (particle diameter: 20–30 nm; specific surface area: 360 m2 g−1) are presented for selective separation of CO2 and CH4. Due to the base amino function, the nanoparticles can reversibly absorb CO2 with a maximal uptake of 153 mg g−1. Absorption and desorption are studied by infrared spectroscopy as well as by gravimetric sorption analysis. Furthermore, Mg2O(2AEP) × 4H2O shows reversible selective separation of CO2 from CH4. Here, pure and mixed gas adsorption isotherms (25 °C, 25 bar) of CO2 and CH4 show maximal uptakes of 153 mg g−1 (CO2) and 15 mg g−1 (CH4). Especially, data of mixed gas isotherms are comparably rare, but highly relevant for material characterization. Experimental isotherms were fitted by a dual-site Langmuir isotherm model (CO2) and a Tòth model (CH4). Mixed adsorption isotherms were modelled by volumetric-chromatographic methods resulting in a selectivity of α = 8 to 20.