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Unravelling exceptional acetylene and carbon dioxide adsorption within a tetra-amide functionalized metal-organic framework.


ABSTRACT: Understanding the mechanism of gas-sorbent interactions is of fundamental importance for the design of improved gas storage materials. Here we report the binding domains of carbon dioxide and acetylene in a tetra-amide functionalized metal-organic framework, MFM-188, at crystallographic resolution. Although exhibiting moderate porosity, desolvated MFM-188a exhibits exceptionally high carbon dioxide and acetylene adsorption uptakes with the latter (232?cm3?g-1 at 295?K and 1?bar) being the highest value observed for porous solids under these conditions to the best of our knowledge. Neutron diffraction and inelastic neutron scattering studies enable the direct observation of the role of amide groups in substrate binding, representing an example of probing gas-amide binding interactions by such experiments. This study reveals that the combination of polyamide groups, open metal sites, appropriate pore geometry and cooperative binding between guest molecules is responsible for the high uptakes of acetylene and carbon dioxide in MFM-188a.

SUBMITTER: Moreau F 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5309720 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Unravelling exceptional acetylene and carbon dioxide adsorption within a tetra-amide functionalized metal-organic framework.

Moreau Florian F   da Silva Ivan I   Al Smail Nada H NH   Easun Timothy L TL   Savage Mathew M   Godfrey Harry G W HG   Parker Stewart F SF   Manuel Pascal P   Yang Sihai S   Schröder Martin M  

Nature communications 20170208


Understanding the mechanism of gas-sorbent interactions is of fundamental importance for the design of improved gas storage materials. Here we report the binding domains of carbon dioxide and acetylene in a tetra-amide functionalized metal-organic framework, MFM-188, at crystallographic resolution. Although exhibiting moderate porosity, desolvated MFM-188a exhibits exceptionally high carbon dioxide and acetylene adsorption uptakes with the latter (232 cm<sup>3</sup> g<sup>-1</sup> at 295 K and 1  ...[more]

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