Nonlinear 3D Ligand-Based Metal-Organic Framework for Thermodynamic-Kinetic Synergistic Splitting of Mono-/Dibranched Hexane Isomers
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
The selective splitting of hexane isomers without the use of energy-intensive phase-change processes is essential for the low-carbon production of clean fuels and also very challenging. Here, we demonstrate a strategy to achieve a complete splitting of the high-RON dibranched isomer from the monobranched and linear isomers, by using a nonlinear 3D ligand to form pillar-layered MOFs with delicate pore architecture and chemistry. Compared with its isoreticular MOFs with the same ted pillar but different linear 3D or linear 2D in-layer ligands, the new MOF constructed in this work, Cu(bhdc)(ted) (ZUL-C5), exhibited an interesting "channel switch" effect which creates pore space with reduced window size and channel dimensionality together with unevenly distributed alkyl-rich adsorption sites, contributing to a greatly enhanced ability to discriminate between mono- and dibranched isomers. Evidenced by a series of studies including adsorption equilibrium/kinetics/breakthrough tests, guest-loaded single-crystal/powder XRD measurement, and DFT-D modeling, a thermodynamic-kinetic synergistic mechanism in the separation was proposed, resulting in a record production time for high-purity 2,2-dimethylbutane along with a high yield.
Smoljan C, Formalik F, Barsoum M, Fahy K, Gaidimas M, Son F Chem Sci. 2025; 16(11):4831-4841.
PMID: 39935499 PMC: 11808794. DOI: 10.1039/d4sc06360k.