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1.
ChemSusChem ; : e202400967, 2024 Jun 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38830830

ABSTRACT

Solid-supported amines having low molecular weight branched poly(ethylenimine) (PEI) physically impregnated into porous solid supports are promising adsorbents for CO2 capture. Co-impregnating short-chain poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) together with PEI alters the performance of the adsorbent, delivering improved amine efficiency (AE, mol CO2 sorbed / mol N) and faster CO2 uptake rates. To uncover the physical basis for this improved gas capture performance, we probed the distribution and mobility of the polymers in the pores via small angle neutron scattering (SANS), solid-state NMR, and molecular dynamic (MD) simulation studies. SANS and MD simulations reveal that PEG displaces wall-bound PEI, making amines more accessible for CO2 sorption. Solid-state NMR and MD simulation suggest intercalation of PEG into PEI domains, separating PEI domains and reducing amine-amine interactions, providing potential PEG-rich and amine-poor interfacial domains that bind CO2 weakly via physisorption while providing facile pathways for CO2 diffusion. Contrary to a prior literature hypothesis, no evidence is obtained for PEG facilitating PEI mobility in solid supports. Instead, the data suggest that PEG chains coordinate to PEI, form larger bodies with reduced mobility compared to PEI alone. We also demonstrate promising CO2 uptake and desorption kinetics at varied temperatures, given by favorable amine distribution.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(37): 43678-43690, 2023 Sep 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37681296

ABSTRACT

Fossil fuel use is accelerating climate change, driving the need for efficient CO2 capture technologies. Solid adsorption-based direct air capture (DAC) of CO2 has emerged as a promising mode for CO2 removal from the atmosphere due to its potential for scalability. Sorbents based on porous supports incorporating oligomeric amines in their pore spaces are widely studied. In this study, we investigate the intermolecular interactions and adsorption of CO2 and H2O molecules in hyperbranched poly(ethylenimine) (HB-PEI) functionalized MCM-41 systems to understand the distribution and transport of CO2 and H2O molecules. Density Functional Theory (DFT) is employed to compute the binding energies of CO2 and H2O molecules with HB-PEI and MCM-41 and to develop force field parameters for molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The MD simulations are performed to examine the distribution and transport of CO2 and H2O molecules as a function of the HB-PEI content. The study finds that an HB-PEI content of approximately 34 wt % is thermodynamically favorable, with an upper limit of HB-PEI loading between 45 and 50 wt %. The distribution of CO2 and H2O molecules is primarily determined by their adsorptive binding energies, for which H2O molecules dominate the occupation of binding sites due to their strong affinity with silanol groups on MCM-41 and amine groups of HB-PEI. The HB-PEI content has a considerable impact on the diffusion of CO2 and H2O molecules. Furthermore, a larger number of water molecules (higher relative humidity) reduces the correlation of CO2 with the MCM-41 pore surface while enhancing the correlation of CO2 with the amine groups of the HB-PEI. Overall, the presence of H2O molecules increases the CO2 correlation with the amine groups and also the CO2 transport within HB-PEI-loaded MCM-41, meaning that the presence of H2O enhances the CO2 capture in the HB-PEI-loaded MCM-41. These findings are consistent with experimental observations of the impact of increasing humidity on CO2 capture while providing new, molecular-level explanations for the macroscopic experimental findings.

3.
Acc Chem Res ; 56(19): 2620-2630, 2023 Oct 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37722889

ABSTRACT

ConspectusSolid-supported amines are a promising class of CO2 sorbents capable of selectively capturing CO2 from diverse sources. The chemical interactions between the amine groups and CO2 give rise to the formation of strong CO2 adducts, such as alkylammonium carbamates, carbamic acids, and bicarbonates, which enable CO2 capture even at low driving force, such as with ultradilute CO2 streams. Among various solid-supported amine sorbents, oligomeric amines infused into oxide solid supports (noncovalently supported) are widely studied due to their ease of synthesis and low cost. This method allows for the construction of amine-rich sorbents while minimizing problems, such as leaching or evaporation, that occur with supported molecular amines.Researchers have pursued improved sorbents by tuning the physical and chemical properties of solid supports and amine phases. In terms of CO2 uptake, the amine efficiency, or the moles of sorbed CO2 per mole of amine sites, and uptake rate (CO2 capture per unit time) are the most critical factors determining the effectiveness of the material. While structure-property relationships have been developed for different porous oxide supports, the interaction(s) of the amine phase with the solid support, the structure and distribution of the organic phase within the pores, and the mobility of the amine phase within the pores are not well understood. These factors are important, because the kinetics of CO2 sorption, particularly when using the prototypical amine oligomer branched poly(ethylenimine) (PEI), follow an unconventional trend, with rapid initial uptake followed by a very slow, asymptotic approach to equilibrium. This suggests that the uptake of CO2 within such solid-supported amines is mass transfer-limited. Therefore, improving sorption performance can be facilitated by better understanding the amine structure and distribution within the pores.In this context, model solid-supported amine sorbents were constructed from a highly ordered, mesoporous silica SBA-15 support, and an array of techniques was used to probe the soft matter domains within these hybrid materials. The choice of SBA-15 as the model support was based on its ordered arrangement of mesopores with tunable physical and chemical properties, including pore size, particle lengths, and surface chemistries. Branched PEI─the most common amine phase used in solid CO2 sorbents─and its linear, low molecular weight analogue, tetraethylenepentamine (TEPA), were deployed as the amine phases. Neutron scattering (NS), including small angle neutron scattering (SANS) and quasielastic neutron scattering (QENS), alongside solid-state NMR (ssNMR) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, was used to elucidate the structure and mobility of the amine phases within the pores of the support. Together, these tools, which have previously not been applied to such materials, provided new information regarding how the amine phases filled the support pores as the loading increased and the mobility of those amine phases. Varying pore surface-amine interactions led to unique trends for amine distributions and mobility; for instance, hydrophilic walls (i.e., attractive to amines) resulted in hampered motions with more intimate coordination to the walls, while amines around hydrophobic walls or walls with grafted chains that interrupt amine-wall coordination showed recovered mobility, with amines being more liberated from the walls. By correlating the structural and dynamic properties with CO2 sorption properties, novel relationships were identified, shedding light on the performance of the amine sorbents, and providing valuable guidance for the design of more effective supported amine sorbents.

4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(24): e202302887, 2023 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37067387

ABSTRACT

Direct air capture (DAC) processes for extraction of CO2 from ambient air are unique among chemical processes in that they operate outdoors with minimal feed pretreatments. Here, the impact of humidity on the oxidative degradation of a prototypical solid supported amine sorbent, poly(ethylenimine) (PEI) supported on Al2 O3 , is explored in detail. By combining CO2 adsorption measurements, oxidative degradation rates, elemental analyses, solid-state NMR and in situ IR spectroscopic analysis in conjunction with 18 O labeling of water, a comprehensive picture of sorbent oxidation is achieved under accelerated conditions. We demonstrated that the presence of water vapor can play an important role in accelerating the degradation reactions. From the study we inferred the identity and kinetics of formation of the major oxidative products, and the role(s) of humidity. Our data are consistent with a radical mediated autooxidative degradation mechanism.

5.
JACS Au ; 3(1): 62-69, 2023 Jan 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36711098

ABSTRACT

Previous research has demonstrated that amine polymers rich in primary and secondary amines supported on mesoporous substrates are effective, selective sorbent materials for removal of CO2 from simulated flue gas and air. Common substrates used include mesoporous alumina and silica (such as SBA-15 and MCM-41). Conventional microporous materials are generally less effective, since the pores are too small to support low volatility amines. Here, we deploy our newly discovered zeolite nanotubes, a first-of-their-kind quasi-1D hierarchical zeolite, as a substrate for poly(ethylenimine) (PEI) for CO2 capture from dilute feeds. PEI is impregnated into the zeolite at specific organic loadings. Thermogravimetric analysis and porosity measurements are obtained to determine organic loading, pore filling, and surface area of the supported PEI prior to CO2 capture studies. MCM-41 with comparable pore size and surface area is also impregnated with PEI to provide a benchmark material that allows for insight into the role of the zeolite nanotube intrawall micropores on CO2 uptake rates and capacities. Over a range of PEI loadings, from 20 to 70 w/w%, the zeolite allows for increased CO2 capture capacity over the mesoporous silica by ∼25%. Additionally, uptake kinetics for nanotube-supported PEI are roughly 4 times faster than that of a comparable PEI impregnated in SBA-15. It is anticipated that this new zeolite will offer numerous opportunities for engineering additional advantaged reaction and separation processes.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(26): 11664-11675, 2022 07 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35729771

ABSTRACT

Supported amines are a promising class of CO2 sorbents offering large uptake capacities and fast uptake rates. Among supported amines, poly(ethyleneimine) (PEI) physically impregnated in the mesopores of SBA-15 silica is widely used. Within these composite materials, the chain dynamics and morphologies of PEI strongly influence the CO2 capture performance, yet little is known about chain and macromolecule mobility in confined pores. Here, we probe the impact of the support-PEI interactions on the dynamics and structures of PEI at the support interface and the corresponding impact on CO2 uptake performance, which yields critical structure-property relationships. The pore walls of the support are grafted with organosilanes with different chemical end groups to differentiate interaction modes (spanning from strong attraction to repulsion) between the pore surface and PEI. Combinations of techniques, such as quasi-elastic neutron scattering (QENS), 1H T1-T2 relaxation correlation solid-state NMR, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, are used to comprehensively assess the physical properties of confined PEI. We hypothesized that PEI would have faster dynamics when subjected to less attractive or repulsive interactions. However, we discover that complex interfacial interactions resulted in complex structure-property relationships. Indeed, both the chain conformation of the surface-grafted chains and of the PEI around the surface influenced the chain mobility and CO2 uptake performance. By coupling knowledge of the dynamics and distributions of PEI with CO2 sorption performance and other characteristics, we determine that the macroscopic structures of the hybrid materials dictate the first rapid CO2 uptake, and the rate of CO2 sorption during the subsequent gradual uptake stage is determined by PEI chain motions that promote diffusive jumps of CO2 through PEI-packed domains.


Subject(s)
Aziridines , Polymers , Adsorption , Amines , Carbon Dioxide/chemistry , Polyethyleneimine/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry
7.
Talanta ; 245: 123480, 2022 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35462139

ABSTRACT

Hydrogel microparticle-based nucleic acid assays are an attractive detection platform based on their multiplexing capabilities with high sensitivity and specificity. A particular area of interest is single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) sensing, where multiple SNPs should be identified in a highly reliable yet economical manner. However, hydrogel microparticles leveraging probe-target hybridization as a key mechanism are hampered by small duplex stability differences arising from single base-pair mismatch. We have developed encoded hydrogel microparticles with DNA probes tailored for multiplex SNP detection. Within the DNA probes, we adopt a widely used base analog (5-nitroindole) so that it substitutes one of the base sequences among DNA probes. The effects of the modification of the probes' structure on SNP sensing has been tested from multiple perspectives, such as specificity, sensitivity, and available assay temperatures at a given ionic strength. We have validated that our hydrogel microparticles exhibit much higher specificity for a single base-pair mismatch with minimal reduction in sensitivity. Our particles can also detect multiple SNPs located in different target strands, which is a significant challenge for conventional particles.


Subject(s)
Hydrogels , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , DNA , DNA Probes/chemistry , DNA Probes/genetics , Hydrogels/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Hybridization
8.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(9): 11235-11247, 2022 Mar 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35229600

ABSTRACT

This work explores the efficacy of silica/organic hybrid catalysts, where the organic component is built from linear aminopolymers appended to the silica support within the support mesopores. Specifically, the role of molecular weight and polymer chain composition in amine-bearing atom transfer radical polymerization-synthesized poly(styrene-co-2-(4-vinylbenzyl)isoindoline-1,3-dione) copolymers is probed in the aldol condensation of 4-nitrobenzaldehyde and acetone. Controlled polymerization produces protected amine-containing poly(styrene) chains of controlled molecular weight and dispersity, and a grafting-to thiol-ene coupling approach followed by a phthalimide deprotection step are used to covalently tether and activate the polymer hybrid catalysts prior to the catalytic reactions. Site-normalized batch kinetics are used to assess the role of polymer molecular weight and chain composition in the cooperative catalysis. Lower-molecular-weight copolymers are demonstrated to be more active than catalysts built from only molecular organic components or from higher-molecular-weight chains. Molecular dynamics simulations are used to probe the role of polymer flexibility and morphology, whereby it is determined that higher-molecular-weight hybrid structures result in congested pores that inhibit active site cooperativity and the diffusivity of reagents, thus resulting in lower rates during the reaction.

9.
ACS Omega ; 6(4): 3390-3398, 2021 Feb 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33553957

ABSTRACT

Hyperbranched poly(ethylenimine) (HB-PEI) has been distinguished as a promising candidate for carbon dioxide (CO2) capture. In this study, we investigate the distribution and transport of CO2 molecules in a HB-PEI membrane at various hydration levels using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. For this, model structures consisting of amorphous HB-PEI membranes with CO2 molecules are equilibrated at various hydration levels. Under dry conditions, the primary and secondary amines are highly associated with CO2, indicating that they would participate in CO2 capture via the carbamate formation mechanism. Under hydrated conditions, the pair correlations of CO2 with the primary and secondary amines are reduced. This result suggests that the carbamate formation mechanism is less prevalent compared to dry conditions, which is also supported by CO2 residence time analysis. However, in the presence of water molecules, it is found that the CO2 molecules can be associated with both amine groups and water molecules, which would enable the tertiary amine as well as the primary and secondary amines to capture CO2 molecules via the bicarbonate formation mechanism. Through our MD simulation results, the feasibilities of different CO2 capture pathways in HB-PEI membranes are demonstrated at the molecular level.

10.
Langmuir ; 36(9): 2271-2277, 2020 03 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32013441

ABSTRACT

Flow lithography (FL), a versatile technique used to synthesize anisotropic multifunctional microparticles, has attracted substantial interest, given that the resulting particles with complex geometries and multilayered biochemical functionalities can be used in a wide variety of applications. However, after this process, there are double bonds remaining from the cross-linkable groups of monomers. The unreacted cross-linkable groups can affect the particles' biochemical properties. Here, we verify that the microparticles produced by FL contain a significant number of unreacted acrylate double bonds (UADBs), which could cause irreversible biochemical changes in the particle and pernicious effects to biological systems. We also confirm that the particles contain a considerable number of UADBs, regardless of the various synthetic (lithographic) conditions that can be used in a typical FL process. We present an effective way to eliminate a substantial amount of UADBs after synthesis by linking biochemically inert poly(ethylene glycol) based on click chemistry. We verify that eliminating UADBs by using this click chemistry approach can efficiently resolve problems, such as the occurrence of random reactions and the cytotoxicity of UADBs.

11.
Anal Chim Acta ; 1076: 110-117, 2019 Oct 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31203954

ABSTRACT

Encoded hydrogel microparticles, synthesized by Stop Flow Lithography (SFL), have shown great potential for microRNA assays for their capability to provide high multiplexing capacity and solution-like hybridization kinetics. However, due to the low conversion of copolymerization during particle synthesis, current hydrogel microparticles can only utilize ∼10% of the input probes that functionalize the particles for miRNA assay. Here, we present a novel method of functionalizing hydrogel microparticles after particle synthesis by utilizing unconverted double bonds remaining inside the hydrogel particles to maximize functional probe incorporation and increase the performance of miRNA assay. This allows covalent bonding of functional probes to the hydrogel network after particle synthesis. Because of the abundance of the unconverted double bonds and accessibility of all probes, the probe density increases about 8.2 times compared to that of particles functionalized during the synthesis. This results lead to an enhanced miRNA assay performance that improves the limit of detection from 4.9 amol to 1.5 amol. In addition, higher specificity and shorter assay time are achieved compared to the previous method. We also demonstrate a potential application of our particles by performing multiplexed miRNA detections in human plasma samples.


Subject(s)
Hydrogels/chemistry , MicroRNAs/blood , Biomarkers/blood , DNA/chemistry , DNA/genetics , DNA Probes/chemistry , DNA Probes/genetics , Humans , Hydrogels/chemical synthesis , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , MicroRNAs/genetics , Microfluidic Analytical Techniques/methods , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , Polyethylene Glycols/chemistry , Porosity
12.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 13683, 2018 09 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30209277

ABSTRACT

Gold nanorods (GNRs) are of great interest in cancer therapy given their ability to ablate tumor cells using deep tissue-penetrating near-infrared light. GNRs coated with tumor-specific moieties have the potential to target tumor tissue to minimize damage to normal tissue. However, perfect targeting is difficult to achieve given that nanoparticles could be broadly dispersed inside the body. Moreover, interaction between targeting groups and biological molecules could lower targeting abilities, resulting in off-target accumulation which might produce nanotoxicity. Here we introduce GNR-encapsulated microcubes (GNR@MCs) that can be utilized as implantable photothermal agents. GNR@MCs are created by encapsulating GNRs in polymeric networks via stop flow lithography (SFL), a one-phase synthesis technique which allows for creation of surfactant-free, uniform particles, and injection of GNR@MCs into the body after a simple rinse step. GNRs are highly packed and firmly encapsulated inside MCs, and entrapped GNRs exhibit optical properties comparable to that of unbound GNRs and photothermal efficiency (58%) in line with that of nano-sized agents (51-95%). Photothermal ablation in murine models is achieved using GNR@MCs stably implanted into the tumor tissue, which suggests that GNR@MCs can be a safe and effective platform for cancer therapy.


Subject(s)
Gold/pharmacology , Phototherapy/methods , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Mice , Nanotubes
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