Abstract
Industrial emissions of large amounts of CO(2) have seriously affected human health, making it imperative to reduce atmospheric CO(2) concentrations. However, carbon capture technologies such as chemical absorption and membrane separation are still limited by high regenerative energy costs, corrosion, and low efficiency in diluting flue gas. Within this technological landscape, physical adsorption separation technology, due to its advantages such as a wide operating temperature range, low equipment corrosivity, and low regeneration energy consumption, has gradually become a research hotspot in carbon capture technology. The core of physical adsorption lies in finding high-quality adsorbents. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), with their ultra-high specific surface area, tunable pore structure, and abundant functionalization sites, are considered highly promising next-generation CO(2) adsorbent materials. This review summarizes strategies for modifying MOFs to improve CO(2) adsorption performance, focusing on aperture adjustment, doped metal ions, functional group doping, and computational screening. Performance enhancements are mechanism-dependent rather than simply additive. Moderate aperture adjustment and defect engineering can improve gas selectivity and CO(2) capture capacity, while excessively narrow pores sacrifice available pore volume and gas diffusion. Doped metal ions, particularly in MOF-74 and related materials, can enhance CO(2) capture capacity while controlling framework integrity and dopant composition. Functional group Doping remains an effective method for capturing low-partial-pressure CO(2). Computational screening is shifting from ranking based on single adsorption capacity to a comprehensive consideration that includes humidity tolerance, stability, and regenerability. Overall, under industrial conditions, modified MOFs should be evaluated by balancing affinity, selectivity, capacity, stability, and energy efficiency. This review provides guidance for the rational design of MOF-based carbon capture adsorbents.