The removal of CO 2 impurities from C 2 H 2 -containing gas mixtures is an important step in purifying C 2 H 2 , a feedstock chemical used in the production of several commodity chemicals. However, that C 2 H 2 and CO 2 exhibit similar size and physicochemical properties makes their separation by physisorption extremely difficult. In this work, we detail how two hybrid ultramicroporous materials (HUMs)-known variant SIFSIX-3-Ni and variant TIFSIX-2-Cu-i-exhibit exceptional CO 2 /C 2 H 2 and C 2 H 2 /CO 2 selectivity, respectively. SIFSIX-3-Ni sets a benchmark for CO 2 /C 2 H 2 selectivity at low partial pressures, whereas TIFSIX-2-Cu-i ranks among the best porous materials in the context of C 2 H 2 / CO 2 selectivity. The performance of these HUMs was confirmed by real-time dynamic breakthrough experiments. To our knowledge, such yin-yang inversion of selectivity in closely related compounds is unprecedented. We attribute this to the distinct sorbate binding sites in SIFSIX-3-Ni and TIFSIX-2-Cu-i, as revealed by modeling studies.
Purification of the C8 aromatics (xylenes and ethylbenzene) is particularly challenging because of their similar physical properties. It is also relevant because of their industrial utility. Physisorptive separation of C8 aromatics has long been suggested as an energy efficient solution but no physisorbent has yet combined high selectivity (>5) with high adsorption capacity (>50 wt %). Now a counterintuitive approach to the adsorptive separation of o‐xylene from other C8 aromatics involves the study of a known nonporous layered material, [Co(bipy)2(NCS)2]n (sql‐1‐Co‐NCS), which can reversibly switch to C8 aromatics loaded phases with different switching pressures and kinetics, manifesting benchmark o‐xylene selectivity (SOX/EB≈60) and high saturation capacity (>80 wt %). Structural insight into the observed selectivity and capacity is gained by analysis of the crystal structures of C8 aromatics loaded phases.
Sequestration of CO, either from gas mixtures or directly from air (direct air capture), is a technological goal important to large-scale industrial processes such as gas purification and the mitigation of carbon emissions. Previously, we investigated five porous materials, three porous metal-organic materials (MOMs), a benchmark inorganic material, ZEOLITE 13X: and a chemisorbent, TEPA-SBA-15: , for their ability to adsorb CO directly from air and from simulated flue-gas. In this contribution, a further 10 physisorbent materials that exhibit strong interactions with CO have been evaluated by temperature-programmed desorption for their potential utility in carbon capture applications: four hybrid ultramicroporous materials, SIFSIX-3-CU: , DICRO-3-NI-I: , SIFSIX-2-CU-I: and MOOFOUR-1-NI: ; five microporous MOMs, DMOF-1: , ZIF-8: , MIL-101: , UIO-66: and UIO-66-NH2: ; an ultramicroporous MOM, NI-4-PYC: The performance of these MOMs was found to be negatively impacted by moisture. Overall, we demonstrate that the incorporation of strong electrostatics from inorganic moieties combined with ultramicropores offers improved CO capture performance from even moist gas mixtures but not enough to compete with chemisorbents.This article is part of the themed issue 'Coordination polymers and metal-organic frameworks: materials by design'.
A new hybrid ultramicroporous material, [Ni(1,4-di(pyridine-2-yl)benzene)(CrO)] (DICRO-4-Ni-i), has been prepared and structurally characterized. Pure gas sorption isotherms and molecular modeling of sorbate-sorbent interactions imply strong selectivity for CH over CO (S). Dynamic gas breakthrough coupled with temperature-programmed desorption experiments were conducted on DICRO-4-Ni-i and two other porous materials reported to exhibit high S, TIFSIX-2-Cu-i and MIL-100(Fe), using a CH/CO/He (10:5:85) gas mixture. Whereas CO/CH coadsorption by MIL-100(Fe) mitigated the purity of trapped CH, negligible coadsorption and high S were observed for DICRO-4-Ni-i and TIFSIX-2-Cu-i.
Stimuli responsive materials (SRMs) respond to environmental changes through chemical and/or structural transformations that can be triggered by interactions at solid-gas or solid-liquid interfaces, light, pressure or temperature. SRMs span compositions as diverse as organic polymers and porous inorganic solids such as zeolites. Metal–organic materials (MOMs), sustained by metal nodes and organic linker ligands are of special interest as SRMs. SR-MOMs have thus far tended to exhibit only one type of transformation, e.g. breathing, in response to one stimulus, e.g. pressure change. We report [Zn2(4,4′-biphenyldicarboxylate)2(4,4′-bis(4-pyridyl)biphenyl)]n, an SR-MOM, which exhibits six distinct phases and four types of structural transformation in response to various stimuli. The observed structural transformations, breathing, structural isomerism, shape memory effect, and change in the level of interpenetration, are previously known individually but have not yet been reported to exist collectively in the same compound. The multi-dynamic nature of this SR-MOM is mainly characterised by using in-situ techniques.
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