Highly Selective Adsorption of Carbon Dioxide over Acetylene in an Ultramicroporous Metal–Organic Framework

Separating carbon dioxide from fuel gases like hydrocarbons by physical adsorbents is industrially important and more energy‐efficient than traditional liquid extraction or cryogenic distillation methods. It is very important while very challenging to develop CO2‐selective adsorbents, considering CO...

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Published inAdvanced materials (Weinheim) Vol. 33; no. 45; pp. e2105880 - n/a
Main Authors Shi, Yanshu, Xie, Yi, Cui, Hui, Ye, Yingxiang, Wu, Hui, Zhou, Wei, Arman, Hadi, Lin, Rui‐Biao, Chen, Banglin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Weinheim Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.11.2021
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Summary:Separating carbon dioxide from fuel gases like hydrocarbons by physical adsorbents is industrially important and more energy‐efficient than traditional liquid extraction or cryogenic distillation methods. It is very important while very challenging to develop CO2‐selective adsorbents, considering CO2 is less polarizable than light hydrocarbon molecules, particularly those simultaneously with almost identical molecular dimensions and physical properties, such as acetylene. Herein, an ultramicroporous metal–organic framework constructed from copper(II) and 5‐fluoropyrimidin‐2‐olate, termed Cu‐F‐pymo, is carefully studied under different activations for inverse separation of CO2 from C2H2. The partially desolvated Cu‐F‐pymo can exclusively capture CO2 over C2H2 with very high selectivity exceeding 105 under ambient conditions, the highest ever reported. Sorption experiments and modeling studies reveal that such molecular sieving effect is attributed to the suppression of C2H2 adsorption from the blockage of the preferential sites for C2H2 by residual water molecules. The inverse separation is further confirmed by column breakthrough studies given that highly pure acetylene (>99.9%) can be directly harvested from the gas mixture. Cu‐F‐pymo also shows remarkable stability under harsh conditions. Partially desolvated Cu‐F‐pymo can exclusively capture CO2 over C2H2 with very high selectivity. Sorption experiments and modeling studies reveal that such a molecular sieving effect is attributed to the suppression of C2H2 adsorption by residual water molecules. The inverse separation is further confirmed by column breakthrough studies given that highly pure acetylene (>99.9%) can be directly harvested.
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ISSN:0935-9648
1521-4095
DOI:10.1002/adma.202105880