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Understanding gas capacity, guest selectivity, and diffusion in porous liquids.
Greenaway, Rebecca L; Holden, Daniel; Eden, Edward G B; Stephenson, Andrew; Yong, Chin W; Bennison, Michael J; Hasell, Tom; Briggs, Michael E; James, Stuart L; Cooper, Andrew I.
Afiliação
  • Greenaway RL; Department of Chemistry and Materials Innovation Factory , University of Liverpool , Crown Street , Liverpool , L69 7ZD , UK . Email: aicooper@liverpool.ac.uk.
  • Holden D; Department of Chemistry and Materials Innovation Factory , University of Liverpool , Crown Street , Liverpool , L69 7ZD , UK . Email: aicooper@liverpool.ac.uk.
  • Eden EGB; Department of Chemistry and Materials Innovation Factory , University of Liverpool , Crown Street , Liverpool , L69 7ZD , UK . Email: aicooper@liverpool.ac.uk.
  • Stephenson A; Department of Chemistry and Materials Innovation Factory , University of Liverpool , Crown Street , Liverpool , L69 7ZD , UK . Email: aicooper@liverpool.ac.uk.
  • Yong CW; Scientific Computing Department , Science and Technologies Facilities Council , Daresbury Laboratory , Sci-Tech Daresbury , Warrington , WA4 4AD , UK.
  • Bennison MJ; Manchester Pharmacy School , Faculty of Medical and Human Sciences , Manchester Academic Health Science Centre , University of Manchester , Manchester , M13 9NT , UK.
  • Hasell T; Department of Chemistry and Materials Innovation Factory , University of Liverpool , Crown Street , Liverpool , L69 7ZD , UK . Email: aicooper@liverpool.ac.uk.
  • Briggs ME; Department of Chemistry and Materials Innovation Factory , University of Liverpool , Crown Street , Liverpool , L69 7ZD , UK . Email: aicooper@liverpool.ac.uk.
  • James SL; Department of Chemistry and Materials Innovation Factory , University of Liverpool , Crown Street , Liverpool , L69 7ZD , UK . Email: aicooper@liverpool.ac.uk.
  • Cooper AI; School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering , Queen's University Belfast , David Keir Building, Stranmillis Road , Belfast , BT9 5AG , UK.
Chem Sci ; 8(4): 2640-2651, 2017 Apr 01.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28553499
ABSTRACT
Porous liquids are a new class of material that could have applications in areas such as gas separation and homogeneous catalysis. Here we use a combination of measurement techniques, molecular simulations, and control experiments to advance the quantitative understanding of these liquids. In particular, we show that the cage cavities remain unoccupied in the absence of a suitable guest, and that the liquids can adsorb large quantities of gas, with gas occupancy in the cages as high as 72% and 74% for Xe and SF6, respectively. Gases can be reversibly loaded and released by using non-chemical triggers such as sonication, suggesting potential for gas separation schemes. Diffusion NMR experiments show that gases are in dynamic equilibrium between a bound and unbound state in the cage cavities, in agreement with recent simulations for related porous liquids. Comparison with gas adsorption in porous organic cage solids suggests that porous liquids have similar gas binding affinities, and that the physical properties of the cage molecule are translated into the liquid state. By contrast, some physical properties are different for example, solid homochiral porous cages show enantioselectivity for chiral aromatic alcohols, whereas the equivalent homochiral porous liquids do not. This can be attributed to a loss of supramolecular organisation in the isotropic porous liquid.

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Temas: Agentes_cancerigenos Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: Chem Sci Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Temas: Agentes_cancerigenos Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: Chem Sci Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article