Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage

Natural gas (methane, CH4) is widely considered as a promising energy carrier for mobile applications. Maximising the storage capacity is the primary goal for the design of future storage media. Here we report the CH4 storage properties in a family of isostructural (3,24)-connected porous materials,...

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Main Authors: Yan, Yong, Kolokolov, Daniil I., da Silva, Ivan, Stepanov, Alexander G., Blake, Alexander J., Dailly, Anne, Manuel, Pascal, Tang, Chiu C., Yang, Sihai, Schröder, Martin
Format: Article
Published: American Chemical Society 2017
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46894/
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author Yan, Yong
Kolokolov, Daniil I.
da Silva, Ivan
Stepanov, Alexander G.
Blake, Alexander J.
Dailly, Anne
Manuel, Pascal
Tang, Chiu C.
Yang, Sihai
Schröder, Martin
author_facet Yan, Yong
Kolokolov, Daniil I.
da Silva, Ivan
Stepanov, Alexander G.
Blake, Alexander J.
Dailly, Anne
Manuel, Pascal
Tang, Chiu C.
Yang, Sihai
Schröder, Martin
author_sort Yan, Yong
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Natural gas (methane, CH4) is widely considered as a promising energy carrier for mobile applications. Maximising the storage capacity is the primary goal for the design of future storage media. Here we report the CH4 storage properties in a family of isostructural (3,24)-connected porous materials, MFM-112a, MFM-115a and MFM-132a with different linker backbone functionalisation. Both MFM-112a and MFM-115a show excellent CH4 uptakes of 236 and 256 cm3 (STP) cm–3 (v/v) at 80 bar and room temperature, respectively. Significantly, MFM-115a displays an exceptionally high deliverable CH4 capacity of 208 v/v between 5 and 80 bar at room temperature, making it among the best performing MOFs for methane storage. We also synthesized the partially deuterated versions of the above materials and applied solid-state 2H NMR spectroscopy to show that these three frameworks contain molecular rotors which exhibit motion in fast, medium and slow regimes, respectively. In situ neutron powder diffraction studies on the binding sites for CD4 within MFM-132a and MFM-115a reveal that the primary binding site is located within the small pocket enclosed by the [(Cu2)3(isophthalate)3] window and three anthracene/phenyl panels. The open Cu(II) sites are the secondary/tertiary adsorption sites in these structures. Thus, we obtained direct experimental evidence showing that a tight cavity can generate a stronger binding affinity to gas molecules than open metal sites. Thus, solid-state 2H NMR and neutron diffraction studies revealed that it is the combination of optimal molecular dynamics, pore geometry and size, and favourable binding sites that leads to the exceptional and different methane uptakes in these materials.
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spelling nottingham-468942020-05-04T18:59:18Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46894/ Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage Yan, Yong Kolokolov, Daniil I. da Silva, Ivan Stepanov, Alexander G. Blake, Alexander J. Dailly, Anne Manuel, Pascal Tang, Chiu C. Yang, Sihai Schröder, Martin Natural gas (methane, CH4) is widely considered as a promising energy carrier for mobile applications. Maximising the storage capacity is the primary goal for the design of future storage media. Here we report the CH4 storage properties in a family of isostructural (3,24)-connected porous materials, MFM-112a, MFM-115a and MFM-132a with different linker backbone functionalisation. Both MFM-112a and MFM-115a show excellent CH4 uptakes of 236 and 256 cm3 (STP) cm–3 (v/v) at 80 bar and room temperature, respectively. Significantly, MFM-115a displays an exceptionally high deliverable CH4 capacity of 208 v/v between 5 and 80 bar at room temperature, making it among the best performing MOFs for methane storage. We also synthesized the partially deuterated versions of the above materials and applied solid-state 2H NMR spectroscopy to show that these three frameworks contain molecular rotors which exhibit motion in fast, medium and slow regimes, respectively. In situ neutron powder diffraction studies on the binding sites for CD4 within MFM-132a and MFM-115a reveal that the primary binding site is located within the small pocket enclosed by the [(Cu2)3(isophthalate)3] window and three anthracene/phenyl panels. The open Cu(II) sites are the secondary/tertiary adsorption sites in these structures. Thus, we obtained direct experimental evidence showing that a tight cavity can generate a stronger binding affinity to gas molecules than open metal sites. Thus, solid-state 2H NMR and neutron diffraction studies revealed that it is the combination of optimal molecular dynamics, pore geometry and size, and favourable binding sites that leads to the exceptional and different methane uptakes in these materials. American Chemical Society 2017-08-03 Article PeerReviewed Yan, Yong, Kolokolov, Daniil I., da Silva, Ivan, Stepanov, Alexander G., Blake, Alexander J., Dailly, Anne, Manuel, Pascal, Tang, Chiu C., Yang, Sihai and Schröder, Martin (2017) Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 139 (38). pp. 13349-13360. ISSN 1520-5126 http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jacs.7b05453 doi:10.1021/jacs.7b05453 doi:10.1021/jacs.7b05453
spellingShingle Yan, Yong
Kolokolov, Daniil I.
da Silva, Ivan
Stepanov, Alexander G.
Blake, Alexander J.
Dailly, Anne
Manuel, Pascal
Tang, Chiu C.
Yang, Sihai
Schröder, Martin
Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage
title Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage
title_full Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage
title_fullStr Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage
title_full_unstemmed Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage
title_short Porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage
title_sort porous metal–organic polyhedral frameworks with optimal molecular dynamics and pore geometry for methane storage
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46894/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46894/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46894/