Control of Permanent Porosity in Type 3 Porous Liquids via Solvent Clustering

DR Brown and MJ Hurlock and TM Nenoff and JM Rimsza, ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES, 17, 5496-5505 (2025).

DOI: 10.1021/acsami.4c18837

Porous liquids (PLs) are an exciting new class of materials for carbon capture due to their high gas adsorption capacity and ease of industrial implementation. They are composed of sorbent particles suspended in a nonadsorbed solvent, forming a liquid with permanent porosity. While PLs have a vast number of potential compositions based on the number of solvents and sorbent materials available, most of the research has been focused on the selection of the sorbent rather than the solvent. Therefore, PL design criteria on the supramolecular structures of the solvent are explored to create a fundamental understanding of how the solvent enables PL formation for rapid discovery of new PL compositions. Atomistic molecular dynamics simulation of eight solvents with a range of molecular sizes, shapes, and intramolecular bonding was performed, identifying that the shape and size of molecular clusters formed in the solvent are the driving predictor of PL formation rather than the size of the individual solvent molecule. The results demonstrate a significant departure from common approaches to PL formation based on the steric exclusion of solvent molecules from the sorbent via the size of the pore aperture. A modeling and experimental validation study further supports these findings. Through this computational material design study, a previously unexplored mechanism in PL formation, solvent-solvent clustering, is identified as a critical factor for the accelerated discovery of liquid phase carbon capture materials.

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