Abstract

Organic structure-directing agent-free steam-assisted conversion and Cs+ ion exchange were used to transform the faujasite (FAU)-type zeolite to the Cs+-type chabazite/phillipsite (CHA/PHI) composite zeolite. Compared with the pure PHI-type zeolite, the Cs+-type CHA/PHI zeolite showed gate-opening CO2 adsorption behavior and good thermal stability. In situ powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) of the CO2 adsorption was measured to elucidate the mechanism for the gate-opening adsorption on the CHA/PHI zeolite. The Na+-type CHA/PHI zeolite did not show such adsorption behavior, and the PXRD pattern of the Na+-type CHA/PHI zeolite did not change with increasing CO2 partial pressure, which suggests that this unique adsorption behavior was caused by the PHI framework transition or Cs+ ions moving in both the CHA and PHI frameworks. Furthermore, in situ Fourier-transform infrared spectra of CO2 adsorption and CO2 breakthrough measurement on the Cs+-type CHA/PHI zeolite suggest that the CHA and PHI frameworks in the CHA/PHI zeolite shared eight-membered-ring windows and that CO2 molecules could easily diffuse from a CHA cage to a PHI framework. The ideal adsorbed solution theory was used to calculate the CO2/N2 separation selectivity for the Cs+-type CHA/PHI zeolite. At 298 and 318 K, the Cs+-type CHA/PHI composite zeolite showed a high CO2/N2 separation coefficient of >10,000 compared with other zeolites with high CO2 adsorption capacity. Furthermore, the CO2 working capacity was calculated for the Cs+-type CHA/PHI zeolite in both the pressure- and temperature-swing processes, and the results showed that the CHA/PHI composite zeolite could selectively separate CO2 from the CO2/N2 gas mixtures released from power generation plants operating using these processes.

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