ja1c04799_si_001.pdf (3.59 MB)
Download fileCoordination Cages Selectively Transport Molecular Cargoes Across Liquid Membranes
journal contribution
posted on 2021-08-02, 11:04 authored by Bao-Nguyen
T. Nguyen, John D. Thoburn, Angela B. Grommet, Duncan J. Howe, Tanya K. Ronson, Hugh P. Ryan, Jeanne L. Bolliger, Jonathan R. NitschkeChemical purifications
are critical processes across many industries,
requiring 10–15% of humanity’s global energy budget.
Coordination cages are able to catch and release guest molecules based
upon their size and shape, providing a new technological basis for
achieving chemical separation. Here, we show that aqueous solutions
of FeII4L6 and CoII4L4 cages can be used as liquid membranes. Selective
transport of complex hydrocarbons across these membranes enabled the
separation of target compounds from mixtures under ambient conditions.
The kinetics of cage-mediated cargo transport are governed by guest
binding affinity. Using sequential transport across two consecutive
membranes, target compounds were isolated from a mixture in a size-selective
fashion. The selectivities of both cages thus enabled a two-stage
separation process to isolate a single compound from a mixture of
physicochemically similar molecules.