Separation and purification of C 4 hydrocarbons are critical processes in the petrochemical industry. The purification performance of a 2D CuPP-Grid molecular sieve membrane is systematically explored by first-principles calculations. A "double-bond effect" will reduce the penetration diameter of molecules, the transferred electrons, and the charge density overlaps between molecules and the molecular sieve, thus making a C 4 H 6 molecule with two carbon−carbon double bonds pass through a pore without a diffusion barrier. An i-C 4 H 10 molecule without a double bond has the highest diffusion barrier of 0.52 eV. Interestingly, the passing i-C 4 H 10 molecule will cause the reversal of the magnetic property of the CuPP-Grid membrane, which can be applied for detection. Remarkably, under 150−400 K, the C 4 H 6 /n-C 4 H 8 , C 4 H 6 /i-C 4 H 8 , and C 4 H 6 /i-C 4 H 10 selectivities of the CuPP-Grid membrane are in the relatively high range of 10 2 −10 26 with superior permeance. Our research theoretically verifies the feasibility of designing a kind of 2D nanomolecular sieve material for the efficient purification of 1,3-butadiene in the petrochemical industry.