Ultramicroporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are demonstrated to be advantageous for the separation and purification of light hydrocarbons such as CH, CH, and CH. The introduction of transition metal sites with strong π-complexation affinity into MOFs is more effective than other adsorption sites for the selective adsorption of π-electron-rich unsaturated hydrocarbon gases from their mixtures. However, lower coordination numbers make it challenging to produce robust MOFs directly utilizing metal ions with π-coordination activity, such as Cu, Ag, and Pd. Herein, a series of novel π-complexing MOFs (SNNU-33s) with a pore size of 4.6 Å are precisely constructed by cleverly introducing symmetrically matched C-type [Cu(pyz)] (pyz = pyrazine) coordinated fragments into 1D hexagonal channels of MIL-88 prototype frameworks. Benifit from the spatial confinement combined with π-complex-active Cu of [Cu(pyz)], pore-space-partitioned SNNU-33 MOFs all present excellent CH/CH, CH/CH, and CO/CH separation ability. Notably, the optimized SNNU-33b adsorbent demonstrates top-level IAST selectivity values for CH/CH (597.4) and CH/CH (69.8), as well as excellent breakthrough performance. Theoretical calculations further reveal that such benchmark light hydrocarbon separation and purification ability is mainly ascribed to the extra-strong binding affinity between Cu and π-electron donor molecules via a spatially confined π-complexation process.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202311555 | DOI Listing |
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