Nanite News
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to BrainMysteries.com RSS Feed Subscribe

Combining scaffold ingredients yields surprising nanoporous structure (12/13/2007)

Tags:
micropores, storage

With a novel twist on existing techniques used to create porous crystals, University of Michigan researchers have developed a new, high-capacity material that may be useful in storing hydrogen, methane and carbon dioxide.

The work builds on a worldwide research effort in the area of porous coordination polymers with high surface areas. Omar Yaghi, a former U-M professor and pioneer in this area coined the term metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) for these materials, which can be described as scaffolds made up of metal hubs linked together with struts of organic compounds. Typically, MOFs are made by combining one type of metal with one type of organic linker, but Matzger's team tried a new strategy: mixing two types of linkers with one metal (zinc).

The result was not a mixture of two types of MOFs, as might be expected, but an entirely new material, dubbed UMCM-1 (University of Michigan Crystalline Material-1), whose structure differs dramatically from that of all known MOFs.

The UMCM-1 structure is made up of six, microporous cage-like structures surrounding a hexagonal channel. The channel, categorized as a mesopore (a pore in the two- to 50-nanometer range), "is like a highway connecting all the microporous cages," a feature that might expedite filling the micropores, said Matzger, an associate professor of chemistry. Researchers have been tinkering with porous materials, trying to improve their capacities, in hopes of finding ways to compactly store large amounts of hydrogen, methane, carbon dioxide and other economically and environmentally important gases.

The mixed-linker approach "exponentially increases the possibilities" for making new, porous materials, Matzger said. In addition, because it allows for mixing a less-expensive linker with a more expensive one, it could lead to substantial cost savings.

Matzger's coauthors on the paper are postdoctoral researcher Kyoungmoo Koh and research scientist Antek Wong-Foy. The researchers received funding from the U.S. Department of Energy.

Their latest results were published online Dec. 4 in the journal Angewandte Chemie.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Michigan

Loans - Arizona Pools - New York Hotels - Mortgages

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Nano-sized 'trojan horse' to aid nutrition 8/26/2008

Beyond jewelry: Engineering new uses for gold 8/24/2008

Air-purifying church windows early nanotechnology 8/23/2008

New 'nano-positioners' may have atomic-scale precision 8/21/2008

Controlling the size of nanoclusters 8/20/2008

New Speed Record for Magnetic Memories 8/19/2008

True properties of carbon nanotubes measured 8/17/2008

Slipping through cell walls, nanotubes deliver high-potency punch to cancer tumors in mice 8/16/2008

Chemists take gold, mass-produce Beijing Olympic logo 8/15/2008

Scientists overcome nanotech hurdle 8/14/2008

Nano vaccine for hepatitis B shows promise for third world 8/13/2008

Shape, not just size, impacts effectiveness of emerging nanomedicine therapies 8/10/2008

Scientists in Berlin are using a new method to resolve the structure of uncharged gold nano particles 8/9/2008

Nanotech Fuel Cell Research May Clear Hydrogen Hurdles 8/7/2008

Scientists discover networks of metal nanoparticles are culprits in alloy corrosion 8/6/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.