Abstract

Efficient carbon capture requires the design of new materials with high CO2 selectivity and gas adsorption capacity that can be incorporated into existing industrial processes. Porous liquids (PLs) are promising candidate materials that consist of a nanoporous host and a solvent forming a liquid permanent porosity based on exclusion of the solvent from the interior of the nanoporous host. Stable PLs are based on solvent-nanoporous host interactions, which can be evaluated through molecular scale simulations. Here, time- and temperature-dependent density functional theory simulations were performed between four solvents, 2-bromophenol, 4-methylphenol, 2,4-dimethylphenol, and cyclohexanone and the CC13 porous organic cage (POC) as a prototypical PL composition. Overall, minimal reactions occurred in the PL including no changes in the POC structure. Additionally, POC-solvent coordination occurred through interactions of neighboring functional groups such as methyl/bromide and hydroxyl on the solvent molecules with the POC surface. Therefore, the location rather than the number of functional groups on the solvent molecule controls the POC-solvent interactions. Additionally, the POC pore window contracted or expanded up to 8% during solvation, which correlates with the experimental solubility and static solvent-POC binding, where solvents that caused less contraction of the POC pore window increased POC solubility. These results allow for the design of optimized POC-based PL compositions based on solvent-nanoporous host binding and variation in the pore window during solvation.

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