4.8 Article

Inverse design of metal-organic frameworks for C2H4/C2H6 separation

Journal

NPJ COMPUTATIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41524-022-00946-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation's Harnessing the Data Revolution (HDR) Big Ideas Program
  2. NSF
  3. [1940118]

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Efficient separation of C2H4/C2H6 mixtures is important in the petrochemical industry. A computational framework for high-throughput screening and inverse design of high-performance MOFs for adsorption and membrane processes is proposed in this work. The framework offers guidelines for MOF design and is generically applicable to materials discovery for gas storage and separation.
Efficient separation of C2H4/C2H6 mixtures is of paramount importance in the petrochemical industry. Nanoporous materials, especially metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), may serve the purpose owing to their tailorable structures and pore geometries. In this work, we propose a computational framework for high-throughput screening and inverse design of high-performance MOFs for adsorption and membrane processes. High-throughput screening of the computational-ready, experimental (CoRE 2019) MOF database leads to materials with exceptionally high ethane-selective adsorption selectivity (LUDLAZ: 7.68) and ethene-selective membrane selectivity (EBINUA02: 2167.3). Moreover, the inverse design enables the exploration of broader chemical space and identification of MOF structures with even higher membrane selectivity and permeability. In addition, a relative membrane performance score (rMPS) has been formulated to evaluate the overall membrane performance relative to the Robeson boundary. The computational framework offers guidelines for the design of MOFs and is generically applicable to materials discovery for gas storage and separation.

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