A huge challenge facing scientists is the development of adsorbent materials that exhibit ultrahigh porosity but maintain balance between gravimetric and volumetric surface areas for the onboard storage of hydrogen and methane gas—alternatives to conventional fossil fuels. Here we report the simulation-motivated synthesis of ultraporous metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) based on metal trinuclear clusters, namely, NU-1501-M (M = Al or Fe). Relative to other ultraporous MOFs, NU-1501-Al exhibits concurrently a high gravimetric Brunauer−Emmett−Teller (BET) area of 7310 m2 g−1 and a volumetric BET area of 2060 m2 cm−3 while satisfying the four BET consistency criteria. The high porosity and surface area of this MOF yielded impressive gravimetric and volumetric storage performances for hydrogen and methane: NU-1501-Al surpasses the gravimetric methane storage U.S. Department of Energy target (0.5 g g−1) with an uptake of 0.66 g g−1 [262 cm3 (standard temperature and pressure, STP) cm−3] at 100 bar/270 K and a 5- to 100-bar working capacity of 0.60 g g−1 [238 cm3 (STP) cm−3] at 270 K; it also shows one of the best deliverable hydrogen capacities (14.0 weight %, 46.2 g liter−1) under a combined temperature and pressure swing (77 K/100 bar → 160 K/5 bar).
Direct air capture is regarded as a plausible alternate approach that, if
economically practical, can mitigate the increasing carbon dioxide emissions associated with two
of the main carbon polluting sources, namely stationary power plants and
transportation. Here we show that metal-organic framework crystal chemistry permits
the construction of an isostructural metal-organic framework (SIFSIX-3-Cu)
based on pyrazine/copper(II)
two-dimensional periodic 44 square grids pillared by silicon hexafluoride anions and thus allows
further contraction of the pore system to 3.5 versus 3.84 Å for
the parent zinc(II) derivative. This enhances the adsorption energetics and
subsequently displays carbon
dioxide uptake and selectivity at very low partial pressures
relevant to air capture and trace carbon
dioxide removal. The resultant SIFSIX-3-Cu exhibits
uniformly distributed adsorption energetics and offers enhanced carbon dioxide physical adsorption
properties, uptake and selectivity in highly diluted gas streams, a performance, to
the best of our knowledge, unachievable with other classes of porous materials.
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