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Designing Open Metal Sites in Metal–Organic Frameworks for Paraffin/Olefin Separations

135

Citations

25

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Incorporating open metal sites (OMS) into metal-organic frameworks allows design of well-defined binding sites for selective molecular adsorption, which has a profound impact on catalysis and separations. We demonstrate that Cu(I) sites incorporated into MFU-4<i>l</i> preferentially adsorb olefins over paraffins. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations show that the OMS are independent, with no dependence of binding energy on olefin loading up to one olefin per Cu(I). Experimentally, increasing Cu(I) loading increased olefin uptake without affecting the binding energy, as predicted by DFT and confirmed by temperature-programmed desorption. The potential of this material for olefin/paraffin separation under ambient conditions was investigated by gas adsorption and column breakthrough experiments for an equimolar ratio of olefin/paraffin. High-grade propylene and ethylene (>99.999%) can be generated using temperature-concentration swing recycling from a Cu(I)-MFU-4<i>l</i> packed column with no measurable paraffin breakthrough.

References

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