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Journal ArticleDOI

Selective gas adsorption and separation in metal–organic frameworks

Jian-Rong Li, +2 more
- 21 Apr 2009 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 5, pp 1477-1504
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TLDR
This critical review starts with a brief introduction to gas separation and purification based on selective adsorption, followed by a review of gas selective adsorbents in rigid and flexible MOFs, and primary relationships between adsorptive properties and framework features are analyzed.
Abstract
Adsorptive separation is very important in industry. Generally, the process uses porous solid materials such as zeolites, activated carbons, or silica gels as adsorbents. With an ever increasing need for a more efficient, energy-saving, and environmentally benign procedure for gas separation, adsorbents with tailored structures and tunable surface properties must be found. Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), constructed by metal-containing nodes connected by organic bridges, are such a new type of porous materials. They are promising candidates as adsorbents for gas separations due to their large surface areas, adjustable pore sizes and controllable properties, as well as acceptable thermal stability. This critical review starts with a brief introduction to gas separation and purification based on selective adsorption, followed by a review of gas selective adsorption in rigid and flexible MOFs. Based on possible mechanisms, selective adsorptions observed in MOFs are classified, and primary relationships between adsorption properties and framework features are analyzed. As a specific example of tailor-made MOFs, mesh-adjustable molecular sieves are emphasized and the underlying working mechanism elucidated. In addition to the experimental aspect, theoretical investigations from adsorption equilibrium to diffusion dynamics via molecular simulations are also briefly reviewed. Furthermore, gas separations in MOFs, including the molecular sieving effect, kinetic separation, the quantum sieving effect for H2/D2 separation, and MOF-based membranes are also summarized (227 references).

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Catalytic applications of enzymes encapsulated in metal–organic frameworks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight the use of enzymes in MOF cages and pores for catalysis applications and discuss the future of this enzyme encapsulation strategy, and highlight the importance of enzymes as highly selective and efficient catalysts.
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Polymers of intrinsic microporosity for energy-intensive membrane-based gas separations

TL;DR: In this article, the role of polymers of intrinsic microporosity (PIMs) in key energy-intensive membrane-based gas separations including O2/N2 and H2/CH4 is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Site Isolation in Metal–Organic Frameworks Enables Novel Transition Metal Catalysis

TL;DR: This Account presents two complementary approaches to the design of ligand-supported single-site MOF catalysts: direct incorporation of prefunctionalized organic linkers into MOFs and postsynthetic functionalization of orthogonal secondary functional groups of theorganic linkers in MOFs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Remarkable adsorptive performance of a metal–organic framework, vanadium-benzenedicarboxylate (MIL-47), for benzothiophene

TL;DR: Liquid-phase adsorption of benzothiophene over isotypic MOFs such as MIL-47 and MIL-53(Al, Cr) has shown that a metal ion of a MOF-type material has a dominant role in adsorptive desulfurization and Mil-47 has a remarkable performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autonomous motors of a metal–organic framework powered by reorganization of self-assembled peptides at interfaces

TL;DR: New autonomous biochemical motors by integrating metal-organic framework (MOF) and self-assembling peptides are developed and it may evolve into the smart autonomous motor that mimic bacteria to swim and harvest target chemicals by integrating recognition units.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Functional porous coordination polymers.

TL;DR: The aim is to present the state of the art chemistry and physics of and in the micropores of porous coordination polymers, and the next generation of porous functions based on dynamic crystal transformations caused by guest molecules or physical stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reticular synthesis and the design of new materials

TL;DR: This work has shown that highly porous frameworks held together by strong metal–oxygen–carbon bonds and with exceptionally large surface area and capacity for gas storage have been prepared and their pore metrics systematically varied and functionalized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Design and synthesis of an exceptionally stable and highly porous metal-organic framework

TL;DR: In this article, an organic dicarboxylate linker is used in a reaction that gives supertetrahedron clusters when capped with monocarboxyates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid porous solids: past, present, future

TL;DR: The state-of-the-art on hybrid porous solids, their advantages, their new routes of synthesis, the structural concepts useful for their 'design', aiming at reaching very large pores are presented.
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