| Literature DB >> 31308517 |
Dong-Dong Zhou1, Pin Chen2, Chao Wang1, Sha-Sha Wang1, Yunfei Du2, Hui Yan2, Zi-Ming Ye1, Chun-Ting He1, Rui-Kang Huang1, Zong-Wen Mo1, Ning-Yu Huang1, Jie-Peng Zhang3.
Abstract
Molecular sieving can lead to ultrahigh selectivity and low regeneration energy because it completely excludes all larger molecules via a size restriction mechanism. However, it allows adsorption of all molecules smaller than the pore aperture and so separations of complicated mixtures can be hindered. Here, we report an intermediate-sized molecular sieving (iSMS) effect in a metal-organic framework (MAF-41) designed with restricted flexibility, which also exhibits superhydrophobicity and ultrahigh thermal/chemical stabilities. Single-component isotherms and computational simulations show adsorption of styrene but complete exclusion of the larger analogue ethylbenzene (because it exceeds the maximal aperture size) and smaller toluene/benzene molecules that have insufficient adsorption energy to open the cavity. Mixture adsorption experiments show a high styrene selectivity of 1,250 for an ethylbenzene/styrene mixture and 3,300 for an ethylbenzene/styrene/toluene/benzene mixture (orders of magnitude higher than previous reports). This produces styrene with a purity of 99.9%+ in a single adsorption-desorption cycle. Controlling/restricting flexibility is the key for iSMS and can be a promising strategy for discovering other exceptional properties.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31308517 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-019-0427-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841