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Asymmetric pore windows in MOF membranes for natural gas valorization.

Sheng ZhouOsama ShekhahAdrian RamírezPengbo LyuEdy Abou-HamadJiangtao JiaJiantang LiPrashant M BhattZhiyuan HuangHao JiangTian JinGuillaume MaurinJorge GasconMohammed Eddaoudi
Published in: Nature (2022)
To use natural gas as a feedstock alternative to coal and oil, its main constituent, methane, needs to be isolated with high purity 1 . In particular, nitrogen dilutes the heating value of natural gas and is, therefore, of prime importance for removal 2 . However, the inertness of nitrogen and its similarities to methane in terms of kinetic size, polarizability and boiling point pose particular challenges for the development of energy-efficient nitrogen-removing processes 3 . Here we report a mixed-linker metal-organic framework (MOF) membrane based on fumarate (fum) and mesaconate (mes) linkers, Zr-fum 67 -mes 33 -fcu-MOF, with a pore aperture shape specific for effective nitrogen removal from natural gas. The deliberate introduction of asymmetry in the parent trefoil-shaped pore aperture induces a shape irregularity, blocking the transport of tetrahedral methane while allowing linear nitrogen to permeate. Zr-fum 67 -mes 33 -fcu-MOF membranes exhibit record-high nitrogen/methane selectivity and nitrogen permeance under practical pressures up to 50 bar, removing both carbon dioxide and nitrogen from natural gas. Techno-economic analysis shows that our membranes offer the potential to reduce methane purification costs by about 66% for nitrogen rejection and about 73% for simultaneous removal of carbon dioxide and nitrogen, relative to cryogenic distillation and amine-based carbon dioxide capture.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • metal organic framework
  • climate change
  • pet imaging
  • air pollution
  • data analysis
  • solid state