Abstract
The development of energy-efficient sorbents for aqueous CO2 capture remains a significant challenge. This work presents a new design strategy by integrating a tertiary amine (morpholine) with a urea motif into a single molecular receptor. This structure enables autonomous, base-free CO2 capture in water, where the urea groups provide complementary hydrogen-bonding sites for (bi)carbonate anions, while the morpholine moiety acts as an internal proton acceptor. The resulting receptors demonstrate a rapid uptake of CO2 from a simulated flue gas (10% CO2/N2), achieving a capacity of up to 1.22 mmol g−1. Spectroscopic studies (NMR, MS) and structural analysis of a model complex confirm that the capture proceeds via hydrogen-bond-stabilized bicarbonate formation. Crucially, the captured CO2 can be completely released under remarkably mild conditions, either by heating at ca. 40 °C or by simple N2 purging at ambient temperature. The receptors exhibit excellent recyclability over multiple capture–release cycles without capacity loss. This study highlights the potential of fine-tuning supramolecular interactions—particularly hydrogen bonding combined with a built-in base—to create low-energy, water-compatible CO2 capture systems.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Dalton Transactions |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Accepted/In press - 2026 |
| Externally published | Yes |
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