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Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic Design of Pore Size and Functionality in Isoreticular MOFs and Their Application in Methane Storage

TLDR
Metal-organic framework (MOF-5), a prototype of a new class of porous materials and one that is constructed from octahedral Zn-O-C clusters and benzene links, was used to demonstrate that its three-dimensional porous system can be functionalized with the organic groups and can be expanded with the long molecular struts biphenyl, tetrahydropyrene, pyrene, and terphenyl.
Abstract
A strategy based on reticulating metal ions and organic carboxylate links into extended networks has been advanced to a point that allowed the design of porous structures in which pore size and functionality could be varied systematically. Metal-organic framework (MOF-5), a prototype of a new class of porous materials and one that is constructed from octahedral Zn-O-C clusters and benzene links, was used to demonstrate that its three-dimensional porous system can be functionalized with the organic groups –Br, –NH2, –OC3H7, –OC5H11, –C2H4, and –C4H4 and that its pore size can be expanded with the long molecular struts biphenyl, tetrahydropyrene, pyrene, and terphenyl. We synthesized an isoreticular series (one that has the same framework topology) of 16 highly crystalline materials whose open space represented up to 91.1% of the crystal volume, as well as homogeneous periodic pores that can be incrementally varied from 3.8 to 28.8 angstroms. One member of this series exhibited a high capacity for methane storage (240 cubic centimeters at standard temperature and pressure per gram at 36 atmospheres and ambient temperature), and others the lowest densities (0.41 to 0.21 gram per cubic centimeter) for a crystalline material at room temperature.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

An Amine-Functionalized MIL-53 Metal−Organic Framework with Large Separation Power for CO2 and CH4

TL;DR: Functionalizing the well-known MIL-53(Al) metal-organic framework with amino groups increases its selectivity in CO(2)/CH(4) separations by orders of magnitude while maintaining a very high capacity forCO(2) capture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microporous manganese formate: a simple metal-organic porous material with high framework stability and highly selective gas sorption properties.

TL;DR: Novel microporous metal-organic framework material composed of Mn(II) and formate ions displays permanent porosity, high thermal stability, and size-selective gas sorption behavior and may find useful applications in gas separation and sensor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in solid sorbents for CO2 capture and new development trends

TL;DR: In this article, the authors organize the CO2 sorbents according to their working temperatures by classifying them as such: (1) low-temperature ( 400 °C), since the sorption capacity, kinetics, recycling stability and cost are important parameters when evaluating a sorbent.
Journal ArticleDOI

A metal–organic framework material that functions as an enantioselective catalyst for olefin epoxidation

TL;DR: A new microporous metal-organic framework compound featuring chiral (salen)Mn struts is highly effective as an asymmetric catalyst for olefin epoxidation, yielding enantiomeric excesses that rival those of the free molecular analogue.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating metal–organic frameworks for post-combustion carbon dioxide capture via temperature swing adsorption

TL;DR: In this article, the performance of two metal-organic frameworks, Zn4O(BTB)2 (BTB3− = 1,3,5-benzenetribenzoate; MOF-177) and Mg2(dobdc) were evaluated in detail for their potential use in post-combustion CO2 capture via temperature swing adsorption.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

van der Waals Volumes and Radii

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.
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Modular chemistry: secondary building units as a basis for the design of highly porous and robust metal-organic carboxylate frameworks.

TL;DR: Consideration of the geometric and chemical attributes of the SBUs and linkers leads to prediction of the framework topology, and in turn to the design and synthesis of a new class of porous materials with robust structures and high porosity.
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Aerogels-Airy Materials: Chemistry, Structure, and Properties.

TL;DR: The design of such a filigrane network requires the very careful control of chemical parameters and the reward is an assortment of different property profiles owing to the richness of possible variations.
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Highly Porous and Stable Metal−Organic Frameworks: Structure Design and Sorption Properties

TL;DR: In this paper, gas sorption isotherm measurements performed on the evacuated derivatives of four porous metal-organic frameworks (MOF-n), Zn(BDC)·(DMF)(H2O) (DMF = N,N‘-dimethylformamide, BDC = 1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) (MoF-2) and Zn3(bDC)3·6CH3OH(MOF)-3, Zn2(BTC)NO3·(C2H5OH
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