4.7 Article

Highly effective hydrogen isotope separation through dihydrogen bond on Cu(I)-exchanged zeolites well above liquid nitrogen temperature

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 391, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2019.123485

Keywords

Hydrogen isotope separation; Cu(I) exchanged zeolite; Dihydrogen bond; Thermal desorption spectroscopy; Density functional theory

Funding

  1. National key research and development program [2017YFE0301501]
  2. National Magnetic Confinement Fusion Science Program of China [2015GB109004]
  3. Science Challenge Project of China [TZ2016004]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21406212, 21573200]
  5. China Academy of Engineering Physics [YZJJLX2017008]
  6. Foundation of China Academy of Engineering Physics [CX2019018]
  7. Foundation of Science and Technology on Surface Physics and Chemistry Laboratory [WDZC201802]

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Hydrogen isotope separation under moderate conditions with high selectivity remains a huge challenge due to the identical physicochemical properties of the isotopes. Here, we present zeolite materials with an excellent thermal stability and highly selective for hydrogen isotope separation through dihydrogen bond on ion-exchanged Cu(I) centers. Thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) measurements show that hydrogen isotope separation and enrichment can be carried out in a technologically favorable temperature range from liquid nitrogen temperature to near room temperature, and a D-2/H-2 selectivity of 24.9 for the Cu(I)-ZSM-5 zeolite is achieved, which is the highest selectivity value ever measured at 100 K. In addition, 99.6% of deuterium can be enriched through only three adsorption/desorption cycles from a mixture with a deuterium concentration of 2.5%. Structural characterization and density functional theory calculations reveal that the high hydrogen isotope selectivity of Cu(I)-ZSM-5 zeolite can be attributed to the strong chemical affinity through dihydrogen bond on Cu(I) sites with a large isotope effect in zero-point energy (Delta E-ZPE) and adsorption enthalpy (Delta H), resulting in hydrogen isotope separation and enrichment efficiently through low-cost materials in a technological scale.

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