Abstract

Developing cost-effective and high-performance solid amine adsorbents has considered as an important way to alleviate the greenhouse effect. How to precisely regulate its pore structure and surface interface characteristics, and how to cooperate to optimize the dynamic mass transfer and adsorption–desorption behavior of gas in the adsorbent are still challenging work. Herein, we demonstrated a facile and efficient approach to construct polyethyleneimine (PEI) impregnated halloysite nanotubes (HNTs) as an emerging nanocomposite for CO2 capture. Based on the natural electrostatic differences of inner and outer walls for HNTs, the hollow tubular structures of adsorbents were constructed by selective surface modification and layer-by-layer electrostatic self-assembly technology to improve the CO2 uptake capacity and cyclic stability, in which poly(sodium-p-styrene sulfonate) (PSS) and PEI were used as polyanionic and polycationic layer, respectively, to coat the inner walls of HNTs. The loading capacity of PSS-PEI composite ionic layers in HNTs and the influence of PSS polyanionic layer on PEI dispersion were specifically discussed according to the CO2 uptake capacity, adsorption heat, thermodynamics and kinetics of the adsorbents. The optimal PEI20-0.5PHNTs adsorbent exhibited a higher CO2 uptake of 0.87 mmol/g at 80 °C in the flow of 40 vol% N2/60 vol% CO2 than that of PEI20-HNTs, owing to the high amine efficiency due to the uniform dispersion of PEI in the electrostatic composite ionic layers. Furthermore, PEI20-0.5PHNTs reached 75 % of the maximum adsorption capacity at the 5th min of the adsorption process and released the most heat during adsorption at − 18.28 kJ/mol due to the presence of electrostatic composite ionic layers. PEI20-0.5PHNTs showed excellent cyclic stability with a slight loss of 7.4 %. The electrostatic self-assembled adsorbent obtained by layer-by-layer loading of PSS and PEI based on the unique surface charge characteristics of HNTs is an inspiration for the synthesis of cost-effective solid amine adsorbents for practical CO2 capture and separation.

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