in the production of polypropylene, the world's second-most widely produced synthetic plastic. The global demand for polypropylene has been rising continuously and its annual growth rate is expected to be 4-5% before 2020, resulting in increasing need for polymer-grade (>99.5%) propylene. [3] Nevertheless, the production of highly pure propylene represents a challenging and complicated process, which involves the separation of propylene from a propane/propylene mixture. Propane/ propylene mixtures are typically obtained by steam cracking of naphtha or during fluid catalytic cracking of gas oils in refineries, with a propylene purity of 50-60% for the former and 80-87% for the latter. Conventional separation of propane and propylene relies on cryogenic distillation, which is carried out at about 243 K and 0.3 MPa in a column containing over 100 trays. [4] Undoubtedly, this heat-driven process is highly energy-intensive.To lower the energy and operational cost and to suppress the carbon emissions associated with the propylene purification process through cryogenic distillation, several alternative technologies have been proposed and among them adsorptive separation, such as pressure/temperature swing adsorption, Adsorptive separation of olefin/paraffin mixtures by porous solids can greatly reduce the energy consumption associated with the currently employed cryogenic distillation technique. Here, the complete separation of propane and propylene by a designer microporous metal-organic framework material is reported. The compound, Y 6 (OH) 8 (abtc) 3 (H 2 O) 6 (DMA) 2 (Y-abtc, abtc = 3,3′,5,5′-azobenzene-tetracarboxylates; DMA = dimethylammonium), is rationally designed through topology-guided replacement of inorganic building units. Y-abtc is both thermally and hydrothermally robust, and possesses optimal pore window size for propane/propylene separation. It adsorbs propylene with fast kinetics under ambient temperature and pressure, but fully excludes propane, as a result of selective size exclusion. Multicomponent column breakthrough experiments confirm that polymer-grade propylene (99.5%) can be obtained by this process, demonstrating its true potential as an alternative sorbent for efficient separation of propane/propylene mixtures.