M
Michael E. Briggs
Researcher at University of Liverpool
Publications - 51
Citations - 3187
Michael E. Briggs is an academic researcher from University of Liverpool. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polymer & Porosity. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 50 publications receiving 2346 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael E. Briggs include École Polytechnique & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Separation of rare gases and chiral molecules by selective binding in porous organic cages
Linjiang Chen,Paul S. Reiss,Samantha Y. Chong,Daniel Holden,Kim E. Jelfs,Tom Hasell,Marc A. Little,Adam Kewley,Michael E. Briggs,Andrew Stephenson,K. Mark Thomas,Jayne A. Armstrong,Jon G. Bell,Jose Busto,Raymond Noel,Jian Liu,Denis M. Strachan,Praveen K. Thallapally,Andrew I. Cooper +18 more
TL;DR: It is shown that a porous organic cage molecule has unprecedented performance in the solid state for the separation of rare gases, such as krypton and xenon, and selective binding of chiral organic molecules such as 1-phenylethanol, suggesting applications in enantioselective separation.
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Controlling electric double-layer capacitance and pseudocapacitance in heteroatom-doped carbons derived from hypercrosslinked microporous polymers
TL;DR: In this article, carbonization of functionalized hypercrosslinked polymers (HCPs) yields highly conductive and porous materials that can be used as supercapacitor electrodes.
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Hyperporous Carbons from Hypercrosslinked Polymers.
TL;DR: Porous carbons with extremely high surface areas are produced through the carbonization of hypercrosslinked benzene, pyrrole, and thiophene and exhibit Brunaeur-Emmett-Teller surface areas up to 4300 m2 g-1.
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Porous Organic Cages for Gas Chromatography Separations
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that a one-pot imine condensation of 1,3,5-triformylbenzene with (R,R)-1,2-cyclohexanediamine catalyzed by trifluoroacetic acid (Scheme 1) can be used for GC separation of a range of mixtures including aromatic compounds, racemic mixtures, and branched alkanes.
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Supramolecular engineering of intrinsic and extrinsic porosity in covalent organic cages.
Michael J. Bojdys,Michael E. Briggs,James T. A. Jones,Dave J. Adams,Samantha Y. Chong,Marc Schmidtmann,Andrew I. Cooper +6 more
TL;DR: A supramolecular approach to the assembly of porous organic cages which involves bulky directing groups that frustrate the crystal packing generates, in a synthetically designed fashion, additional 'extrinsic' porosity between the intrinsically porous cage units.