Abstract

Understanding, controlling, and utilizing the flexibility of adsorbents are of great importance and difficulty. Analogous with conventional solid materials, downsizing to the nanoscale is emerging as a possible strategy for controlling the flexibility of porous coordination polymers (or metal-organic frameworks). We report a unique flexibility controllable by crystal size at the micrometer to submillimeter scale. Template removal transforms [Cu2(pypz)2]·0.5p-xylene (MAF-36, Hpypz = 4-(1H-pyrazol-4-yl)pyridine) with one-dimensional channels to α-[Cu2(pypz)2] with discrete small cavities, and further heating gives a nonporous isomer β-[Cu2(pypz)2]. Both isomers can adsorb p-xylene to give [Cu2(pypz)2]·0.5p-xylene, meaning the coexistence of guest-driven flexibility and shape-memory behavior. The phase transition temperature from α-[Cu2(pypz)2] to β-[Cu2(pypz)2] decreased from ~270°C to ~150°C by increasing the crystal size from the micrometer to the submillimeter scale, ca. 2-3 orders larger than those of other size-dependent behaviors. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction showed coordination bond reconstitution and chirality inversion mechanisms for the phase transition, which provides a sufficiently high energy barrier to stabilize the metastable phase without the need of downsizing to the nanoscale. By virtue of the crystalline molecular imprinting and gate-opening effects, α-[Cu2(pypz)2] and β-[Cu2(pypz)2] show unprecedentedly high p-xylene selectivities of 16 and 51, respectively, as well as ultrafast adsorption kinetics (<2 minutes), for xylene isomers.

Highlights

  • As an indispensable raw material for polyethylene terephthalate and polybutylene terephthalate, p-xylene is generally obtained from xylene mixtures produced in catalytic reforming of crude oil

  • Single-crystal X-ray diffraction revealed a zigzagshaped two-dimensional (2D) coordination structure, in which antiparallel copper-pyrazolate 21 helices are interconnected by Cu-pyridyl bonds in one of the two available directions

  • MAF-36 exhibits a unique flexibility among a guest-included and two guest-free states, in which the common guest-driven structural transformation and the special shape-memory behavior coexist, and noteworthily, the latter is tunable by crystal size at the micrometer to submillimeter scale

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Summary

Introduction

As an indispensable raw material for polyethylene terephthalate and polybutylene terephthalate, p-xylene (pX) is generally obtained from xylene mixtures produced in catalytic reforming of crude oil. Because of their similar physical properties, the separation of xylene mixtures is challenging. Flexible adsorbents can change their structures in response to external stimuli, which have great potential to achieve ultrahigh separation efficiency [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10], successful examples for xylene isomers are still scarce [2,3,4]. Changing guest loading controls the host framework structure rather than

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