
Preparation and Properties of A Hyperbranch-Structured Polyamine adsorbent for Carbon Dioxide Capture
Author(s) -
Hui He,
Yajie Hu,
Shuixia Chen,
Linzhou Zhuang,
Beiyue Ma,
Qinghua Wu
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
scientific reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 213
ISSN - 2045-2322
DOI - 10.1038/s41598-017-04329-w
Subject(s) - adsorption , grafting , polyamine , chemical engineering , swelling , acrylamide , polypropylene , materials science , polymer , fiber , polymer chemistry , chemistry , monomer , organic chemistry , composite material , biochemistry , engineering
A fibrous adsorbent with amino-terminated hyperbranch structure (PP-AM-HBP-NH 2 ) was prepared by grafting hyperbranched polyamine (HBP-NH 2 ) onto the acrylamide-modified polypropylene (PP) fibers. The grafting of AM on PP fibers provided the active sites for introducing HBP-NH 2 onto the PP fibers. This kind of “grafting to” procedure to synthesize hyperbranch-structured fiber could overcome the disadvantages of stepwise growth procedure, avoiding the complicated synthesis process and the requirement of strict experimental conditions. The grafted HBP-NH 2 was three-dimensional dentritic architecture and had a large number of pores existing within the grafted polymers, which is favorable for CO 2 molecules to diffuse into the HBP-NH 2 . Therefore, the as-prepared PP-AM-HBP-NH 2 fibers showed a high adsorption capacity (5.64 mmol/g) for CO 2 in the presence of water at 25 °C, and the utilization efficiency of alkyl amino groups could reach 88.2%, demonstrating that the hyperbranched structure of adsorbents can greatly promote adsorption capacity and efficiency. This could be attributed to better swelling properties and lower mass transfer resistance to CO 2 of the hyperbranched adsorbent. PP-AM-HBP-NH 2 also showed excellent regeneration performance, and it could maintain the same adsorption capacity for CO 2 after 15 recycle numbers as the fresh adsorbent.