Back to Search Start Over

Predicting the Mechanism and Products of CO2 Capture by Amines in the Presence of H2O

Authors :
Christopher W. Jones
David A. Dixon
La’Darious J. Quinn
Sophia E. Hayes
Zachary R. Lee
Source :
The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 125:9802-9818
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2021.

Abstract

An extensive correlated molecular orbital theory study of the reactions of CO2 with a range of substituted amines and H2O in the gas phase and aqueous solution was performed at the G3(MP2) level with a self-consistent reaction field approach. The G3(MP2) calculations were benchmarked at the CCSD(T)/CBS level for NH3 reactions. A catalytic NH3 reduces the energy barrier more than a catalytic H2O for the formation of H2NCOOH and H2CO3. In aqueous solution, the barriers to form both H2NCOOH and H2CO3 are reduced, with HCO3- formation possible with one amine present and H2NCOO- formation possible only with two amines. Further reactions of H2NCOOH to form HNCO and urea via the Bazarov reaction have high barriers and are unlikely in both the gas phase and aqueous solution. Reaction coordinates for CH3NH2, CH3CH2NH2, (CH3)2NH, CH3CH2CH2NH2, (CH3)3N, and DMAP were also calculated. The barrier for proton transfer correlates with amine basicity for alkylammonium carbamate (ΔG‡aq < 15 kcal/mol) and alkylammonium bicarbonate (ΔG‡aq < 30 kcal/mol) formation. In aqueous solution, carbamic acids, carbamates, and bicarbonates can all form in small amounts with ammonium carbamates dominating for primary and secondary alkylamines. These results have implications for CO2 capture by amines in both the gas phase and aqueous solution as well as in the solid state, if enough water is present.

Details

ISSN :
15205215 and 10895639
Volume :
125
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Physical Chemistry A
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........584705f7ce9588686a8a0b8b9f2fafec
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.1c05950