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Reverse Separation of Carbon Dioxide and Acetylene in Two Isostructural Copper Pyridine-Carboxylate Frameworks.

Jing-Hong LiYou-Wei GanJun-Xian ChenRui-Biao LinYisi YangHui WuWei ZhouBanglin ChenXiao-Ming Chen
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Separating acetylene from carbon dioxide is important but highly challenging due to their similar molecular shapes and physical properties. Adsorptive separation of carbon dioxide from acetylene can directly produce pure acetylene but is hardly realized because of relatively polarizable acetylene binds more strongly. Here, we reverse the CO 2 and C 2 H 2 separation by adjusting the pore structures in two isoreticular ultramicroporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). Under ambient conditions, copper isonicotinate (Cu(ina) 2 ), with relatively large pore channels shows C 2 H 2 -selective adsorption with a C 2 H 2 /CO 2 selectivity of 3.4, whereas its smaller-pore analogue, copper quinoline-5-carboxylate (Cu(Qc) 2 ) shows an inverse CO 2 /C 2 H 2 selectivity of 5.6. Cu(Qc) 2 shows compact pore space that well matches the optimal orientation of CO 2 but is not compatible for C 2 H 2 . Neutron powder diffraction experiments confirmed that CO 2 molecules adopt preferential orientation along the pore channels during adsorption binding, whereas C 2 H 2 molecules bind in an opposite fashion with distorted configurations due to their opposite quadrupole moments. Dynamic breakthrough experiments have validated the separation performance of Cu(Qc) 2 for CO 2 /C 2 H 2 separation.
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