Abstract

Controlling gas admission by regulating pore accessibility in porous materials has been a topic of extensive research. Recently, the electric field (E-field) has emerged as an external stimulus to alter the adsorption behavior of some microporous adsorbents. However, the mechanism behind this phenomenon is not yet fully understood. Here, we demonstrate the crucial role of the trapdoor cations of zeolite molecular sieves in E-field-regulated gas adsorption. The E-field activation caused framework expansion and cation deviation, significantly reducing the energy barrier for gas molecules passing through the pore aperture gated by the trapdoor cation. This led to an increase in the N2 adsorption capacity of ZSM-25 and a 60% improvement in N2/CH4 selectivity in the quest for nitrogen rejection for natural gas processing. By combining experimental and computational approaches, we elucidated the influence of E-field activation as a concurrent effect of the reduced heat of adsorption caused by framework expansion and the decrease in the energy barrier resulting from promoted cation oscillation. These findings pave the way for the material design of E-field-regulated adsorption and its application in molecular separation.

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