http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-18396655  12 June 2012 Last 
updated at 11:42 

New holey material soaks up CO2
 Two interlocking but not 
completely overlapping structures leave room for gases 
UK researchers have developed a 
porous material that can preferentially soak up CO2 from the atmosphere.
NOTT-202 is a "metal-organic framework" that works like a sponge, absorbing a 
number of gases at high pressures.
But as the pressure is reduced, CO2 is retained as other gases are 
released.
The development, reported 
in Nature Materials, holds promise for carbon capture and storage, or even 
for removing CO2 from the exhaust gases of power plants and factories.
Metal-organic frameworks have been considered promising structures to trap 
gases for a number of years. They are so named because they comprise atoms of a 
metallic element at their core, surrounded by scaffolds of longer, 
carbon-containing chains.
These complex molecules can be made to join together in frameworks that leave 
gaps suitable for capturing gases.
However, until now, such frameworks have been good primarily at gathering any 
gas passing through them; those that were selective for CO2 have proven to have 
a low capacity for storing the gas.
"Increasing the selectivity for CO2 in the presence of gaseous mixtures 
represents a major challenge if these systems are to find practical 
applications 
under dynamic conditions," the authors wrote.
The research started at the universities of Nottingham and Newcastle, where 
scientists discovered a chemical system that seemed to solve this problem of 
selectively storing a significant amount of CO2. 
But to be sure of just what they had, they collaborated with a team at the 
Diamond Light Source in Oxfordshire and the Science and Technology Facilities 
Council's Daresbury Laboratory to get a microscopic look at what they had 
created.
Using X-ray diffraction and detailed computer models, the researchers found 
that NOTT-202 is made up of two different frameworks that slot together 
incompletely, leaving "nanopore" gaps particularly suited to gathering up 
CO2.
This two-part structure, the researchers claim, is an entirely new class of 
porous material. 
As such, research into just how similarly paired frameworks can be created 
may help researchers find a range of materials suited to soaking up specific 
gases. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-18396655                   
                  

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