| Literature DB >> 27198674 |
Xili Cui1, Kaijie Chen2, Huabin Xing3, Qiwei Yang1, Rajamani Krishna4, Zongbi Bao1, Hui Wu5, Wei Zhou5, Xinglong Dong6, Yu Han6, Bin Li7, Qilong Ren1, Michael J Zaworotko8, Banglin Chen9.
Abstract
The trade-off between physical adsorption capacity and selectivity of porous materials is a major barrier for efficient gas separation and purification through physisorption. We report control over pore chemistry and size in metal coordination networks with hexafluorosilicate and organic linkers for the purpose of preferential binding and orderly assembly of acetylene molecules through cooperative host-guest and/or guest-guest interactions. The specific binding sites for acetylene are validated by modeling and neutron powder diffraction studies. The energies associated with these binding interactions afford high adsorption capacity (2.1 millimoles per gram at 0.025 bar) and selectivity (39.7 to 44.8) for acetylene at ambient conditions. Their efficiency for the separation of acetylene/ethylene mixtures is demonstrated by experimental breakthrough curves (0.73 millimoles per gram from a 1/99 mixture).Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27198674 DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf2458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728