4.6 Article

A porous metal-organic framework with an elongated anthracene derivative exhibiting a high working capacity for the storage of methane

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 2, Issue 29, Pages 11516-11522

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c4ta01860e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Welch Foundation [AX-1730]
  2. DOE BES [DE-FG02-08ER46522]

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We have developed a new porous metal-organic framework (MOF) (UTSA-80) with an elongated anthracene derivative as a linker. The activated UTSA-80a has a pore volume of 1.03 cm(3) g(-1) and a gravimetric Brunauer-Emmett-Teller surface area of ca. 2280 m(2) g(-1), higher than those of PCN-14. The volumetric methane storage capacity of UTSA-80a at 35 bar and 298 K is 192 cm(3) (STP) cm(-3), which makes it one of the few porous MOFs with a storage capacity > 190 cm(3) (STP) cm(-3) at 35 bar. The volumetric uptake of methane by UTSA-80a reaches 233 cm(3) (STP) cm(-3) at room temperature and 65 bar; this is 88.6% of the new volumetric target of the US Department of Energy if the packing density loss is ignored. This capacity is comparable with that of PCN-14. However, as a result of the lower methane uptake of UTSA-80a at 5 bar, it has a much higher methane storage working capacity (deliverable amount of methane between 65 and 5 bar) of 174 cm(3) (STP) cm(-3) compared with PCN-14 [157-160 cm(3) (STP) cm(-3)]. This value is slightly lower than the 190 cm(3) (STP) cm(-3) achieved by HKUST-1, suggesting that it is a promising material for methane storage in transport applications. Such an exceptionally high working capacity can probably be attributed to the elongated anthracene derivative used as a linker within UTSA-80a, which adjusts the pore sizes/cages and interactions with the methane molecules to optimize the methane working capacity.

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