A titanosilicate molecular sieve with adjustable pores for size-selective adsorption of molecules
Abstract
Zeolites and related crystalline microporous oxides-tetrahedrally coordinated atoms covalently linked into a porous framework-are of interest for applications ranging from catalysis to adsorption and ion-exchange. In some of these materials (such as zeolite rho) adsorbates, ion-exchange, and dehydration and cation relocation can induce strong framework deformations. Similar framework flexibility has to date not been seen in mixed octahedral/tetrahedral microporous framework materials, a newer and rapidly expanding class of molecular sieves. Here we show that the framework of the titanium silicate ETS-4, the first member of this class of materials, can be systematically contracted through dehydration at elevated temperatures to `tune' the effective size of the pores giving access to the interior of the crystal. We show that this so-called `molecular gate' effect can be used to tailor the adsorption properties of the materials to give size-selective adsorbents suitable for commercially important separations of gas mixtures of molecules with similar size in the 4.0 to 3.0Å range, such as that of N2/CH4, Ar/O2 and N2/O2.
- Publication:
-
Nature
- Pub Date:
- August 2001
- DOI:
- 10.1038/35089052
- Bibcode:
- 2001Natur.412..720K