Using a manganese polymer to separate xylene isomers
A team of researchers at Zhejiang University in China, working with colleagues at Rutgers University in the U.S., has developed a way to use a manganese polymer to separate xylene isomers. In their paper published in the journal Science, the group describes the process and notes that it is simpler and less expensive than other methods.
Xylene isomers are important chemical intermediates that are often used to make different types of plastics. Three of them are of particular value: par, meta and ortho. Unfortunately, as they are synthesized in standard processes, they come out bound together. In order to be useful, they must be separated. But doing so has proven to be time-consuming and expensive. This is because all three have similar structures and boiling points.
The work by the researchers involved finding a material that could serve as an adsorber—where molecules of a liquid or gas form a thin film on a surface that can then be collected. They searched for one-dimensional coordination porous polymers that were known to have flexibility and identified manganese, which initially seemed as if it would not work because its pores are too small. But the researchers found that when exposed to a xylene mixture, its structure swelled, increasing the distance between the polymer chains and making the pores bigger. And that allowed for adsorption and consequent separation of the isomers.