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Water and Carbon Dioxide in Hydrated Hyperbranched Polyethylenimine Membrane Using Molecular Dynamics Simulation and Density Functional Theory

POSTER

Abstract

Since excessive use of fossil fuels is releasing large amounts of CO2 and exacerbating global warming, developing efficient materials to capture CO2 is crucial. In this study, we investigate the hydrated hyperbranched polyethylenimine (HB-PEI) membrane in the presence/absence of water and carbon dioxide using molecular dynamics (MD) simulation to characterize their distribution and reaction mechanism in the HB-PEI membrane. For this, we prepare a model HB-PEI molecule and construct a condensed HB-PEI phase in the amorphous phase with various concentration of water and carbon dioxide molecules. Large-scale Atomic/Molecular Massively Parallel Simulator (LAMMPS) package is used in our MD simulations to establish the equilibrium state of HB-PEI membranes. Through our MD simulations, we obtain samples of the local structure of water/carbon dioxide nearby amine groups in HB-PEI membranes and scrutinize a possible molecular mechanism and corresponding energy barrier for carbon dioxide capturing, via density functional theory (DFT) approach.

Presenters

  • Kyung Il Kim

    Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Kyung Il Kim

    Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Robin Lawler

    Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Seung Soon Jang

    Georgia Inst of Tech, Materials Science and Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology