Tang Wenqi, Meng Shasha, Xu Ming, Gu Zhiyuan
School of Chemistry and Materials Science, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing 210023, China.
Se Pu. 2021 Jan;39(1):57-68. doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1123.2020.06028.
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a new class of porous materials, which are synthesized using organic ligands and inorganic metal ions or metal clusters. MOFs possess tunable structures through the self-assembly of a large number of organic linkers and metal nodes, which is beyond the scope of conventional porous materials. In addition, MOFs have excellent properties, including the lowest density (as low as 0.13 g/cm), highest specific surface area (as high as 10400 m/g), and largest pore aperture (as large as 9.8 nm) among all porous materials reported till date. Because of their high porosity, large surface area, tunable apertures, as well as high chemical and thermal stabilities, MOFs have been widely applied in the fields of adsorption, separation, and catalysis. In addition, MOFs have been successfully applied as stationary phases for isomer separation in gas chromatography (GC). Since the use of the first MOF (MOF-508) packed column for the separation of alkane isomers in GC, several other MOFs (e. g., MIL-47, MOF-5, and ZIF-8) have been employed for the GC separation of isomers. However, packed-column-type separation not only requires gram-scale quantities of MOFs, thereby increasing the analysis cost, but also results in poor separation efficiency. The first MOF (MIL-101) capillary column designed toward cost reduction allowed for the baseline separation of xylene and ethylbenzene isomers within 100 s under constant-temperature conditions. Since then, the capillary-type column has been widely utilized in the MOF-based stationary phase for GC separation.Alkanes, xylene isomers and ethyl toluene, oxy-organics and organic pollutants are not only important chemicals in industry but also harmful environmental pollutants. Thus, the separation of these analytes is of practical importance environmental monitoring and industrial quality control. However, it is difficult to realize the efficient separation and detection of these isomers or racemates because of their similar boiling points and molecular sizes. In the past decades, GC was utilized as a rapid and efficient technique for the separation of the abovementioned analytes. The stationary phase used in GC plays a dominant role in the separation processes. This review summarizes the MOF-based GC separation of the abovementioned targets based on the different classification of analytes, including alkanes, xylenes, racemates, oxy-organics and persistent organic pollutants.The separation mechanisms of different analytes are also discussed according to the structural benefits of MOFs. The separation mechanisms mainly involve van der Waals forces between the MOFs and analytes, interactions between the unsaturated metal sites and different functional groups of the analytes, molecular sieve effect or shape selectivity, and hydrogen-bond or interactions. In addition, the chiral recognition abilities of MOFs possibly depend on the interactions between the chiral active sites in chiral MOFs and racemates.Furthermore, efficient GC separation is influenced by thermodynamic and kinetic factors. The thermodynamic factor is mainly the difference between the partition coefficients of the separated components, which also reflects the properties of the analytes as well as the interactions between the stationary phase and the analytes. The kinetic factor also affects the column efficiency and chromatographic peak shape. Compared with traditional inorganic porous materials, MOFs with tunable structures are more favorable for optimizing the separation of isomers from both thermodynamic and kinetic standpoints. Therefore, this review summarizes the separation mechanism when using MOFs as stationary phases for isomer separation via thermodynamic and kinetic analyses. We hope the review would aid the state-of-art design of MOF stationary phases for high efficient isomer separations in GC.
金属有机框架材料(MOFs)是一类新型多孔材料,由有机配体与无机金属离子或金属簇合成。MOFs通过大量有机连接体和金属节点的自组装拥有可调节的结构,这超出了传统多孔材料的范畴。此外,MOFs具有优异的性能,在迄今报道的所有多孔材料中,其密度最低(低至0.13 g/cm³)、比表面积最高(高达10400 m²/g)、孔径最大(高达9.8 nm)。由于其高孔隙率、大表面积、可调节的孔径以及高化学稳定性和热稳定性,MOFs已广泛应用于吸附、分离和催化领域。此外,MOFs已成功用作气相色谱(GC)中异构体分离的固定相。自从首次使用MOF(MOF - 508)填充柱在GC中分离烷烃异构体以来,其他几种MOFs(如MIL - 47、MOF - 5和ZIF - 8)也已用于GC异构体分离。然而,填充柱型分离不仅需要克级数量的MOFs,从而增加了分析成本,而且分离效率也很差。设计用于降低成本的首个MOF(MIL - 101)毛细管柱能够在恒温条件下100 s内实现二甲苯和乙苯异构体的基线分离。从那时起,毛细管型柱已广泛用于基于MOF的GC分离固定相。烷烃、二甲苯异构体和乙基甲苯、含氧有机物和有机污染物不仅是工业中的重要化学品,也是有害的环境污染物。因此,这些分析物的分离在环境监测和工业质量控制中具有实际重要性。然而,由于这些异构体或外消旋体的沸点和分子大小相似,难以实现它们的高效分离和检测。在过去几十年中,GC被用作分离上述分析物的快速有效技术。GC中使用的固定相在分离过程中起主导作用。本综述基于分析物的不同分类,总结了基于MOF的GC对上述目标物的分离,包括烷烃、二甲苯、外消旋体、含氧有机物和持久性有机污染物。还根据MOFs的结构优势讨论了不同分析物的分离机制。分离机制主要涉及MOFs与分析物之间的范德华力、不饱和金属位点与分析物不同官能团之间的相互作用、分子筛效应或形状选择性以及氢键或相互作用。此外,MOFs的手性识别能力可能取决于手性MOFs中的手性活性位点与外消旋体之间的相互作用。此外,高效的GC分离受热力学和动力学因素影响。热力学因素主要是分离组分分配系数之间的差异,这也反映了分析物的性质以及固定相与分析物之间的相互作用。动力学因素也影响柱效率和色谱峰形状。与传统无机多孔材料相比,具有可调节结构的MOFs从热力学和动力学角度更有利于优化异构体的分离。因此,本综述通过热力学和动力学分析总结了使用MOFs作为固定相进行异构体分离时的分离机制。我们希望本综述有助于MOF固定相的先进设计,以实现GC中高效的异构体分离。