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Efficient separation of xylene isomers by a guest-responsive metal-organic framework with rotational anionic sites.


ABSTRACT: The separation of xylene isomers (para-, meta-, orth-) remains a great challenge in the petrochemical industry due to their similar molecular structure and physical properties. Porous materials with sensitive nanospace and selective binding sites for discriminating the subtle structural difference of isomers are urgently needed. Here, we demonstrate the adaptively molecular discrimination of xylene isomers by employing a NbOF52--pillared metal-organic framework (NbOFFIVE-bpy-Ni, also referred to as ZU-61) with rotational anionic sites. Single crystal X-ray diffraction studies indicate that ZU-61 with guest-responsive nanospace/sites can adapt the shape of specific isomers through geometric deformation and/or the rotation of fluorine atoms in anionic sites, thereby enabling ZU-61 to effectively differentiate xylene isomers through multiple C-H···F interactions. ZU-61 exhibited both high meta-xylene uptake capacity (3.4?mmol?g-1) and meta-xylene/para-xylene separation selectivity (2.9, obtained from breakthrough curves), as well as a favorable separation sequence as confirmed by breakthrough experiments: para-xylene elute first with high-purity (?99.9%), then meta-xylene, and orth-xylene. Such a remarkable performance of ZU-61 can be attributed to the type anionic binding sites together with its guest-response properties.

SUBMITTER: Cui X 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7595167 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Efficient separation of xylene isomers by a guest-responsive metal-organic framework with rotational anionic sites.

Cui Xili X   Niu Zheng Z   Shan Chuan C   Yang Lifeng L   Hu Jianbo J   Wang Qingju Q   Lan Pui Ching PC   Li Yijian Y   Wojtas Lukasz L   Ma Shengqian S   Xing Huabin H  

Nature communications 20201028 1


The separation of xylene isomers (para-, meta-, orth-) remains a great challenge in the petrochemical industry due to their similar molecular structure and physical properties. Porous materials with sensitive nanospace and selective binding sites for discriminating the subtle structural difference of isomers are urgently needed. Here, we demonstrate the adaptively molecular discrimination of xylene isomers by employing a NbOF<sub>5</sub><sup>2-</sup>-pillared metal-organic framework (NbOFFIVE-bp  ...[more]

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