TY - JOUR
T1 - ZIF-8 based materials for CO2 capture
T2 - synthesis, functionalization, and adsorption performance
AU - Farrukh, Aliza
AU - Ahmad, Waheed
AU - Tahir, Muhammad
AU - Naseem, Mizna
AU - Nisa, Fazal Ul
AU - Ahmed, Maria
AU - Ghafar, Iram Abdul
AU - Bibi, Batoul
AU - Kalsoom, Tahira
AU - Ullah, Habib
AU - Ma, Zeyu
AU - Chen, Jibing
AU - Tang, Hui
AU - He, Liang
AU - Dai, Jun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026
PY - 2026/9/15
Y1 - 2026/9/15
N2 - Zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (ZIF-8) has emerged as an important candidate for next-generation carbon capture technologies due to its unique porosity, structural robustness, and tunability. This review critically examines the molecular and material design principles behind ZIF-8's performance in selective carbon dioxide (CO2) adsorption under realistic conditions. We explore the intrinsic crystallographic features that enable size-selective molecular sieving and physisorption-dominated uptake, as well as strategies for chemical functionalization that enhance affinity through amine grafting and the exchange of polar linkers. Synthesis methodologies ranging from conventional solvothermal to innovative green and mechanochemical routes are analyzed for their impacts on structural integrity, scalability, and adsorption efficacy. Composite systems comprising polymers, ionic liquids, and carbonaceous materials are discussed, highlighting the advances in membrane integration to enhance permeability and selectivity. We also evaluate performance metrics, including capacity, selectivity, cyclic stability, and regeneration energy, and contextualize them against competing candidates and industrial benchmarks. Challenges such as moisture sensitivity, pore blockage, and sustainable manufacturing are critically addressed, alongside opportunities in defect engineering, stimuli-responsive adsorption, and system-level integration. By providing a holistic framework that combines molecular insights, synthetic innovation, and application-driven designs, this review positions ZIF-8 as a versatile platform for scalable, energy-efficient CO2 capture solutions to global climate mitigation efforts.
AB - Zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (ZIF-8) has emerged as an important candidate for next-generation carbon capture technologies due to its unique porosity, structural robustness, and tunability. This review critically examines the molecular and material design principles behind ZIF-8's performance in selective carbon dioxide (CO2) adsorption under realistic conditions. We explore the intrinsic crystallographic features that enable size-selective molecular sieving and physisorption-dominated uptake, as well as strategies for chemical functionalization that enhance affinity through amine grafting and the exchange of polar linkers. Synthesis methodologies ranging from conventional solvothermal to innovative green and mechanochemical routes are analyzed for their impacts on structural integrity, scalability, and adsorption efficacy. Composite systems comprising polymers, ionic liquids, and carbonaceous materials are discussed, highlighting the advances in membrane integration to enhance permeability and selectivity. We also evaluate performance metrics, including capacity, selectivity, cyclic stability, and regeneration energy, and contextualize them against competing candidates and industrial benchmarks. Challenges such as moisture sensitivity, pore blockage, and sustainable manufacturing are critically addressed, alongside opportunities in defect engineering, stimuli-responsive adsorption, and system-level integration. By providing a holistic framework that combines molecular insights, synthetic innovation, and application-driven designs, this review positions ZIF-8 as a versatile platform for scalable, energy-efficient CO2 capture solutions to global climate mitigation efforts.
KW - Carbon capture
KW - Carbonaceous materials
KW - Mechanochemistry
KW - Stimuli-responsive adsorption
KW - Zeolitic imidazolate frameworks
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105037662956
U2 - 10.1016/j.ccr.2026.218015
DO - 10.1016/j.ccr.2026.218015
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105037662956
SN - 0010-8545
VL - 563
JO - Coordination Chemistry Reviews
JF - Coordination Chemistry Reviews
M1 - 218015
ER -