Controllable inverse C2H2/CO2 separation in ultra-stable Zn-organic frameworks for efficient removal of trace CO2 from acetylene†
Abstract
It is of great challenge to produce highly pure C2H2 from the CO2/C2H2 mixture because of their similar physical properties. Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) have shown great potential in purifying C2H2 by virtue of their versatile pore environment with excellent tunability. However, the rational exploration of ideal MOF adsorbents with CO2-preferred CO2/C2H2 separation performance (also called inverse C2H2/CO2 separation) is extremely difficult. In this work, we demonstrate a new Zn-MOF family (SNNU-334–336) with special CO2-preferred CO2/C2H2 separation performance, which can be rationally controlled by functional groups as well as temperature. Notably, SNNU-334–336 MOFs show extremely high stability, and SNNU-336 can maintain a stable structure even after 7 days in boiling water and 30 days in air, which is unprecedented for all Zn-based MOF materials. Different to common MOF adsorbents, the adsorption isotherms of SNNU-334–336 MOFs for C2H2 and CO2 under the same temperature all have an intersection point (we called the inverse point), which gradually moves to the high-pressure region with the increase of temperature and changes with the pore environment variation. So, SNNU-334–336 MOFs can be rationally controlled from C2H2-selective to CO2-selective CO2/C2H2 adsorption separation adsorbents. IAST selectivity calculation indicates that a very high CO2 over C2H2 selectivity (3595.4) can be achieved, which nearly surpasses those of all reported MOFs with CO2-preferred CO2/C2H2 separation performance. Fixed-bed column breakthrough experiments further prove that SNNU-334–336 MOFs all have controllable inverse CO2/C2H2 separation ability and can produce C2H2 with extra-high purity (>99.9%) from the CO2/C2H2 (1/99) mixture.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Journal of Materials Chemistry A HOT Papers