Scalable reflux synthesis of a bimicroporous hydrogen-bonded framework with specific molecule recognition ability for one-step ethylene purification†
Abstract
Efficient purification of ethylene (C2H4) from an acetylene/ethylene/ethane (C2H2/C2H4/C2H6) mixture is crucial but challenging. For this purpose, herein, an ideal separation process that employed an adsorbent with specific adsorption regions for guest molecules and multiple hydrogen-bonds (H-bonds) was proposed. A penetrated cage-channel bimicroporous hydrogen-bonded organic framework (SNNU-520) was selected to verify the feasibility of this approach. Owing to the size effect, the small size cage located in the metal–organic building units allowed only C2H2 trapping, and the penetrated channel with medium approachable size mainly contributed to the adsorption of C2H4 and C2H6 molecules. Together with the multiple H-bond interactions, the penetrated channel preferred the C2H6 molecules. Furthermore, thermodynamic and kinetic adsorption experiments and theoretical simulation were conducted to confirm the adsorption mechanism. According to the results, SNNU-520 exhibited an exceptionally high C2H2 and C2H6 uptake capacity, and the C2H6 uptake at 298 K was at a superior level among most of the reported HOFs and MOFs for ternary mixture separation. Dynamic breakthrough experiments showed that SNNU-520 could produce highly purified C2H4 from a C2H4/C2H6 mixture and C2H2/C2H4/C2H6 ternary mixture in one step with a moderately high productivity, implying that the trade-off effect between the adsorption capacity and selectivity was also overcome. Thus, considering its scalable reflux synthesis process, extra-high stability, unique and adjustable penetrated cage-channels, and abundant H-bonds, SNNU-520 is a potential material for industrial applications.