Advanced Science (Sep 2024)
Unexpected Molecular Sieving of Xylene Isomer Using Tethered Ligand in Polymer‐Metal–Organic Frameworks (polyMOFs)
Abstract
Abstract Promising advances in adsorption technology can lead to energy‐efficient solutions in industrial sectors. This work presents precise molecular sieving of xylene isomers in the polymer‐metal‐oragnic framework (polyMOF), a hybrid porous material derived from the parent isoreticular MOF‐1 (IRMOF‐1). PolyMOFs are synthesized by polymeric ligands bridged by evenly spaced alkyl chains, showing reduced pore sizes and enhanced stabilities compared to its parent material due to tethered polymer bridge within the pores while maintaining the original rigid crystal lattice. However, the exact configuration of the ligands within the crystals remain unclear, posing hurdles to predicting the adsorption performances of the polyMOFs. This work reveals that the unique pore structure of polyIRMOF‐1‐7a can discriminate xylene isomers with sub‐angstrom size differences, leading to highly selective adsorption of p‐xylene over other isomers and alkylbenzenes in complex liquid mixtures (αpX/OM = 15 and αpX/OME = 9). The structural details of the polyIRMOF‐1‐7a are elucidated through computational studies, suggesting a plausible configuration of alkyl chains within the polyMOF crystal, which enable a record‐high p‐xylene selectivity and stability in liquid hydrocarbon. With this unprecedented molecular selectivity in MOFs, “polymer‐MOF” hybridization is expected to meet rigorous requirements for high‐standard molecular sieving through precisely tunable and highly stable pores.
Keywords