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Design of a Metal–Organic Framework with Enhanced Back Bonding for Separation of N2 and CH4

Gas separations with porous materials are economically important and provide a unique challenge to fundamental materials design, as adsorbent properties can be altered to achieve selective gas adsorption. Metal–organic frameworks represent a rapidly expanding new class of porous adsorbents with a la...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2014-01, Vol.136 (2), p.698-704
Main Authors: Lee, Kyuho, Isley, William C, Dzubak, Allison L, Verma, Pragya, Stoneburner, Samuel J, Lin, Li-Chiang, Howe, Joshua D, Bloch, Eric D, Reed, Douglas A, Hudson, Matthew R, Brown, Craig M, Long, Jeffrey R, Neaton, Jeffrey B, Smit, Berend, Cramer, Christopher J, Truhlar, Donald G, Gagliardi, Laura
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Gas separations with porous materials are economically important and provide a unique challenge to fundamental materials design, as adsorbent properties can be altered to achieve selective gas adsorption. Metal–organic frameworks represent a rapidly expanding new class of porous adsorbents with a large range of possibilities for designing materials with desired functionalities. Given the large number of possible framework structures, quantum mechanical computations can provide useful guidance in prioritizing the synthesis of the most useful materials for a given application. Here, we show that such calculations can predict a new metal–organic framework of potential utility for separation of dinitrogen from methane, a particularly challenging separation of critical value for utilizing natural gas. An open V(II) site incorporated into a metal–organic framework can provide a material with a considerably higher enthalpy of adsorption for dinitrogen than for methane, based on strong selective back bonding with the former but not the latter.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/ja4102979