| Literature DB >> 34337947 |
Bao-Nguyen T Nguyen1, John D Thoburn2, Angela B Grommet1, Duncan J Howe1, Tanya K Ronson1, Hugh P Ryan1, Jeanne L Bolliger1, Jonathan R Nitschke1.
Abstract
Chemical purifications are critical processes across many industries, requiring 10-15% of humanity's global energy budget. Coordination cages are able to catch and release guest molecules based upon their size and shape, providing a new technological basis for achieving chemical separation. Here, we show that aqueous solutions of FeII4L6 and CoII4L4 cages can be used as liquid membranes. Selective transport of complex hydrocarbons across these membranes enabled the separation of target compounds from mixtures under ambient conditions. The kinetics of cage-mediated cargo transport are governed by guest binding affinity. Using sequential transport across two consecutive membranes, target compounds were isolated from a mixture in a size-selective fashion. The selectivities of both cages thus enabled a two-stage separation process to isolate a single compound from a mixture of physicochemically similar molecules.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34337947 PMCID: PMC8397303 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c04799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419
Figure 1(a) The triphasic system configured in a U-shaped tube and our proposed mechanism of naphthalene transport by cages. Naphthalene (●) is encapsulated at the boundary between feedstock and aqueous membrane layers. The cages and their encapsulated cargoes diffuse through the aqueous layer to the receiving phase boundary. The encapsulated cargoes are then released from the cage cavities into the receiving organic phase. (b) Cages chosen for the aqueous membranes.
Figure 2Transport of naphthalene from the feedstock to the receiving phase mediated (a) by cage 1 and (b) by cage 2. Fitting to the transport model described in Supporting Information Section 5.2 provided molar flux values for guest transport through the aqueous membrane. (NA = naphthalene concentration in the feedstock arm, NB = in the cage layer, NC = in the receiving arm).
Figure 3Illustration of the stepwise chemical separation. (a) A mixture of naphthalene, mesitylene, cis-stilbene and triisopropylbenzene was initially introduced to the feedstock arm of the first tube. Cage 1 selectively filtered naphthalene, mesitylene and cis-stilbene to the receiving arm, which then became the feedstock arm of the second stage, where cage 2 subsequently separated naphthalene from mesitylene and cis-stilbene. (b) Plots showing distribution of the compounds in the receiving phases following separation by cages 1 and 2. Stage 1 took 43 days, and stage 2 took 25 days.