http://m.phys.org/news/2014-11-chemists-porous-molecules-greenhouse-gases.html

Chemists develop porous molecules that bind greenhouse gases

Nov 13, 2014

A team of University of Houston (UH) chemistry researchers have developed a
molecule that assembles spontaneously into a lightweight structure with
microscopic pores capable of binding large quantities of several potent
greenhouse gases."Greenhouse gases, such a carbon dioxide, have received
much attention lately because of their potential to dramatically affect
Earth's climate, primarily the temperature of the planet," said Ognjen
Miljanić, a UH associate professor of chemistry and leader of the team.

While carbon dioxide presents the biggest problem, Miljanić notes that
several other compounds are hundreds or thousands of times more potent in
their greenhouse effect per unit of mass. These compounds include Freons,
used as common refrigerants, and fluorocarbons, highly stable organic
compounds in which one or more hydrogen atoms have been replaced with
fluorine."

We developed a molecule that self-assembles into a structure that can
capture these greenhouse vapors to the tune of 75 percent by weight,"
Miljanić said. "This molecule could be used to capture Freons from disposed
refrigeration systems, for example, or to concentrate them prior to
analysis of their content."

In their recent paper in Nature Communications, Miljanić and his colleagues
report that a small molecule based on an extensively fluorinated backbone
will form a structure with extremely small pores about 1.6 nanometers in
diameter. Members of the team included Miljanić and professors Allan
Jacobson and Olafs Daugulis, all from UH's Department of Chemistry in the
College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics.

"These tiny pores are lined with fluorine atoms, giving them a high
affinity for other molecules containing fluorine - such as fluorocarbons
and Freons," Miljanić said.Porous materials with similar pore sizes have
been developed in previous studies, but those materials were often heavy,
because of the presence of metals, as well as sensitive to water and
difficult to process and recycle."

The advantages of the current material is that it is stable to water and
composed from individual molecules held together only by weak
interactions," Miljanić said. "This latter feature makes this material
lightweight, because there are no metal connectors."The weak
interactions between the molecules can be broken when needed, so the
molecule can be recycled or deposited on a surface. The molecule is stable
to 280 degrees Celsius.

In this international collaboration, UH researchers worked with Yu-Sheng
Chen from the University of Chicago and Yu-Chun Chuang from the Taiwan
National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center. A provisional patent based
on this work has been filed.

Provided by University of Houston

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