Competitive co-adsorption of CO2 with H2O, NH3, SO2, NO, NO2, N2, O2, and CH4 in M-MOF-74 (M= Mg, Co, Ni): the role of hydrogen bonding
Kui Tan, Sebastian Zuluaga, Qihan Gong, Yuzhi Gao, Nour Nijem, Jing, Li, Timo Thonhauser, Yves J Chabal

TL;DR
This study investigates the competitive co-adsorption of various gases in M-MOF-74 materials, revealing that adsorption stability depends more on kinetic factors and guest-host interactions than solely on binding energies.
Contribution
It demonstrates that molecular exchange in MOFs is governed by kinetic barriers and guest interactions, challenging the reliance on binding energies alone for predicting adsorption behavior.
Findings
Water and ammonia displace CO2 more readily than other gases.
Binding energies alone do not predict adsorption stability.
Kinetic barriers are critical in determining co-adsorption dynamics.
Abstract
The importance of co-adsorption for applications of porous materials in gas separation has motivated fundamental studies, which have initially focused on the comparison of the binding energies of different gas molecules in the pores (i.e. energetics) and their overall transport. By examining the competitive co-adsorption of several small molecules in M-MOF-74 (M= Mg, Co, Ni) with in-situ infrared spectroscopy and ab initio simulations, we find that the binding energy at the most favorable (metal) site is not a sufficient indicator for prediction of molecular adsorption and stability in MOFs. Instead, the occupation of the open metal sites is governed by kinetics, whereby the interaction of the guest molecules with the MOF organic linkers controls the reaction barrier for molecular exchange. Specifically, the displacement of CO2 adsorbed at the metal center by other molecules such as…
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