Abstract

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have gained widespread attention in many fields, especially in gas adsorption and separation. However, traditional MOFs always suffer from a trade-off (i.e., the coordination of adsorption capacity and separation selectivity) effect when separating some challenging and similar gas mixtures. As one type of promising MOFs, anion-pillared MOFs (APMOFs) are designed by introducing another member of anion pillar with abundant hydrogen-bonding acceptors (e.g., F, O, and H), which are capable of overcoming the technical bottleneck of the trade-off owing to novel synergistic effects by the coordination of pore size/shape and chemistry. With the dramatic increase in the number of reported APMOFs, a comprehensive review of their structures and properties is necessary to better cater to this hot topic. In this review, various type of APMOFs with diverse topologies and building blocks are categorised by anions, such as MFSIX (MF62-, M = Metal), FOXF (MOxF6-x2-), DICRO (CrO72-), BSF (B12H122-), MOFOUR (MO42-), and the like. In addition, recent progresses for gas separation by APMOFs and their composites are also comprehensively focused on, including CO2 separation, C2H4 purification, C3H6 purification, C4 isomers separation, C5 olefins separation, xylene isomers separation, and Xe/Kr separation. Furthermore, some important issues concerning the design strategies and corresponding applications are emphasized, which should attract more and more attentions in the future.

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