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Designed amyloid fibers as materials for selective carbon dioxide capture.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2013-12-25)
Dan Li, Hiroyasu Furukawa, Hexiang Deng, Cong Liu, Omar M Yaghi, David S Eisenberg
RESUMEN

New materials capable of binding carbon dioxide are essential for addressing climate change. Here, we demonstrate that amyloids, self-assembling protein fibers, are effective for selective carbon dioxide capture. Solid-state NMR proves that amyloid fibers containing alkylamine groups reversibly bind carbon dioxide via carbamate formation. Thermodynamic and kinetic capture-and-release tests show the carbamate formation rate is fast enough to capture carbon dioxide by dynamic separation, undiminished by the presence of water, in both a natural amyloid and designed amyloids having increased carbon dioxide capacity. Heating to 100 °C regenerates the material. These results demonstrate the potential of amyloid fibers for environmental carbon dioxide capture.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Carbon dioxide, ≥99.8%
Sigma-Aldrich
Carbon-12C dioxide, 99.9 atom % 12C
Sigma-Aldrich
Carbon-12C dioxide, 99.99 atom % 12C