Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Huabin Xing is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Huabin Xing.


Science | 2016

Pore chemistry and size control in hybrid porous materials for acetylene capture from ethylene

Xili Cui; Kai-Jie Chen; Huabin Xing; Qiwei Yang; Rajamani Krishna; Zongbi Bao; Hui Wu; Wei Zhou; Xinglong Dong; Yu Han; Bin Li; Qilong Ren; Michael J. Zaworotko; Banglin Chen

Separating one organic from another Separating closely related organic molecules is a challenge (see the Perspective by Lin).The separation of acetylene from ethylene is needed in high-purity polymer production. Cui et al. developed a copper-based metal-organic framework with hexafluorosilicate and organic linkers designed to have a high affinity for acetylene. These materials, which capture four acetylene molecules in each pore, successfully separated acetylene from mixtures with ethylene. Propane and propylene are both important feedstock chemicals. Their physical and chemical similarity, however, requires energy-intense processes to separate them. Cadiau et al. designed a fluorinated porous metal-organic framework material that selectively adsorbed propylene, with the complete exclusion of propane. Science, this issue pp. 141 and 137; see also p. 121 A copper-based metal-organic framework with hexafluorosilicate linkers can separate acetylene from ethylene. The trade-off between physical adsorption capacity and selectivity of porous materials is a major barrier for efficient gas separation and purification through physisorption. We report control over pore chemistry and size in metal coordination networks with hexafluorosilicate and organic linkers for the purpose of preferential binding and orderly assembly of acetylene molecules through cooperative host-guest and/or guest-guest interactions. The specific binding sites for acetylene are validated by modeling and neutron powder diffraction studies. The energies associated with these binding interactions afford high adsorption capacity (2.1 millimoles per gram at 0.025 bar) and selectivity (39.7 to 44.8) for acetylene at ambient conditions. Their efficiency for the separation of acetylene/ethylene mixtures is demonstrated by experimental breakthrough curves (0.73 millimoles per gram from a 1/99 mixture).


Energy and Environmental Science | 2016

Potential of microporous metal–organic frameworks for separation of hydrocarbon mixtures

Zongbi Bao; Ganggang Chang; Huabin Xing; Rajamani Krishna; Qilong Ren; Banglin Chen

In the process industries, the separation of mixtures of hydrocarbons is important both for the preparation of feedstocks and for use as end products. The constituents, hydrocarbons, are either aliphatic or aromatic, saturated or unsaturated, with a large variation in the number of carbon atoms. Using microporous metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), a number of different separation strategies can be employed to achieve the desired separation performance. The strategies include selective binding with the metal atoms of the framework, exploiting differences in molecular packing efficiencies within the ordered pore structures, utilizing selectivities based on the framework flexibility and gate-opening mechanisms, and molecular sieving. Various strategies are discussed in this article, along with perspectives for future research and development for improving the separation performance.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014

Enhancing the basicity of ionic liquids by tuning the cation-anion interaction strength and via the anion-tethered strategy.

Dan Xu; Qiwei Yang; Baogen Su; Zongbi Bao; Qilong Ren; Huabin Xing

Ionic liquids (ILs) with relatively strong basicity often show impressive performance in chemical processes, so it is important to enhance the basicity of ILs by molecular design. Here, we proposed two effective ways to enhance the basicity of ILs: by weakening the cation-anion interaction strength and by employing the anion-tethered strategy. Notably, two quantum-chemical parameters, the most negative surface electrostatic potential and the lowest surface average local ionization energy, were adopted as powerful tools to demonstrate the electrostatic and covalent aspects of basicity, respectively, at the microscopic level. It was shown that, for the ILs with the same anion (acetate or trifluoroacetate), the basicity of the ILs could be enhanced when the cation-anion interaction strength was weakened. For the acetate anion-based ILs, the hydrogen-bonding basicity scale (β) increased by 29% when the cation changed from 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium ([Bmim]) to tetrabutylphosphonium ([P4444]), achieving one of the highest reported β values for ILs. Moreover, it was also demonstrated that, when an amine group was tethered to the anion of the IL, its basicity was stronger than when it was tethered to the cation. These results are highly instructive for designing ILs with strong basicity and for improving the efficiency of IL-based processes, such as CO2 capture, SO2 and acetylene absorption, dissolution of cellulose, extraction of bioactive compounds, and so on.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Differential Solubility of Ethylene and Acetylene in Room-Temperature Ionic Liquids: A Theoretical Study

Xu Zhao; Huabin Xing; Qiwei Yang; Rulong Li; Baogen Su; Zongbi Bao; Yiwen Yang; Qilong Ren

The room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) have potential in realizing the ethylene (C(2)H(4)) and acetylene (C(2)H(2)) separation and avoiding solvent loss and environmental pollution compared with traditional solvents. The interaction mechanisms between gases and RTILs are important for the exploration of new RTILs for gas separation; thus, they were studied by quantum chemical calculation and molecular dynamics simulation in this work. The optimized geometries were obtained for the complexes of C(2)H(4)/C(2)H(2) with anions (Tf(2)N(-), BF(4)(-), and OAc(-)), cation (bmim(+)), and their ion pairs, and the analysis for geometry, interaction energy, natural bond orbital (NBO), and atoms in molecules (AIM) was performed. The quantum chemical calculation results show that the hydrogen-bonding interaction between the gas molecule and anion is the dominant factor in determining the solubility of C(2)H(2) in RTILs. However, the hydrogen-bonding interaction, the p-π interaction in C(2)H(4)-anion, and the π-π interaction in C(2)H(4)-cation are weak and comparable, which all affect the solubility of C(2)H(4) in RTILs with comparable contribution. The calculated results for the distance of H(gas)···X (X = O or F in anions), the BSSE-corrected interaction energy, the electron density of H(gas)···X at the bond critical point (ρ(BCP)), and the relative second-order perturbation stabilization energy (E(2)) are consistent with the experimental data that C(2)H(2) is more soluble than C(2)H(4) in the same RTILs and the solubility of C(2)H(4) in RTILs has the following order: [bmim][Tf(2)N] > [bmim][OAc] > [bmim][BF(4)]. The calculated results also agree with the order of C(2)H(2) solubility in different RTILs that [bmim][OAc] > [bmim][BF(4)] > [bmim][Tf(2)N]. Furthermore, the calculation results indicate that there is strong C(2)H(2)-RTIL interaction, which cannot be negligible compared to the RTIL-RTIL interaction; thus, the regular solution theory is probably not suitable to correlate C(2)H(2) solubility in RTILs. The molecular dynamics simulation results show that the hydrogen bond between the H in C2 of the imidazolium cation and the anion will weaken the hydrogen-bonding interaction of the gas molecule and anion in a realistic solution condition, especially in the C(2)H(4)-RTIL system.


RSC Advances | 2014

Fabrication of cuprous nanoparticles in MIL-101: an efficient adsorbent for the separation of olefin–paraffin mixtures

Ganggang Chang; Zongbi Bao; Qilong Ren; Shuguang Deng; Zhiguo Zhang; Baogen Su; Huabin Xing; Yiwen Yang

Various amounts of Cu+ nanoparticles were successfully deposited to the pores of metal–organic frameworks MIL-101 with a double-solvent method. An optimized, cuprous-loaded MIL-101 was shown to have an enhanced ethylene adsorption capacity and higher ethylene–ethane selectivity (14.0), compared to pure MIL-101 (1.6). The great improvement in selectivity can be attributed to the newly generated nano-sized cuprous chloride particles that can selectively interact with the carbon–carbon double bond in ethylene through π-complexation.


Advanced Materials | 2017

An Ideal Molecular Sieve for Acetylene Removal from Ethylene with Record Selectivity and Productivity

Bin Li; Xili Cui; Daniel O'Nolan; Hui Min Wen; Mengdie Jiang; Rajamani Krishna; Hui Wu; Rui Biao Lin; Yu-Sheng Chen; Daqiang Yuan; Huabin Xing; Wei Zhou; Qilong Ren; Guodong Qian; Michael J. Zaworotko; Banglin Chen

Realization of ideal molecular sieves, in which the larger gas molecules are completely blocked without sacrificing high adsorption capacities of the preferred smaller gas molecules, can significantly reduce energy costs for gas separation and purification and thus facilitate a possible technological transformation from the traditional energy-intensive cryogenic distillation to the energy-efficient, adsorbent-based separation and purification in the future. Although extensive research endeavors are pursued to target ideal molecular sieves among diverse porous materials, over the past several decades, ideal molecular sieves for the separation and purification of light hydrocarbons are rarely realized. Herein, an ideal porous material, SIFSIX-14-Cu-i (also termed as UTSA-200), is reported with ultrafine tuning of pore size (3.4 Å) to effectively block ethylene (C2 H4 ) molecules but to take up a record-high amount of acetylene (C2 H2 , 58 cm3 cm-3 under 0.01 bar and 298 K). The material therefore sets up new benchmarks for both the adsorption capacity and selectivity, and thus provides a record purification capacity for the removal of trace C2 H2 from C2 H4 with 1.18 mmol g-1 C2 H2 uptake capacity from a 1/99 C2 H2 /C2 H4 mixture to produce 99.9999% pure C2 H4 (much higher than the acceptable purity of 99.996% for polymer-grade C2 H4 ), as demonstrated by experimental breakthrough curves.


Chinese Journal of Chemical Engineering | 2013

Recent Advances in Separation of Bioactive Natural Products

Qilong Ren; Huabin Xing; Zongbi Bao; Baogen Su; Qiwei Yang; Yiwen Yang; Zhiguo Zhang

Abstract Bioactive natural products are a main source of new drugs, functional foods and food additives. The separation of bioactive natural products plays an important role in transformation and use of biomass. The isolation and purification of bioactive principle from a complex matrix is often inherent bottleneck for the utilization of natural products, so a series of extraction and separation techniques have been developed. This review covers recent advances in the separation of bioactive natural products with an emphasis on their solubility and diffusion coefficients, recent extraction techniques and isolation techniques. This overview of recent technological advances, discussion of pertinent problems and prospect of current methodologies in the separation of bioactive natural products may provide a driving force for development of novel separation techniques.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2012

Separation of Soybean Isoflavone Aglycone Homologues by Ionic Liquid-Based Extraction

Yifeng Cao; Huabin Xing; Qiwei Yang; Zongbi Bao; Baogen Su; Yiwen Yang; Qilong Ren

The separation of a compound of interest from its structurally similar homologues is an important and challenging problem in producing high-purity natural products, such as the separation of genistein from other soybean isoflavone aglycone (SIA) homologues. The present work provided a novel method for separating genistein from its structurally similar homologues by ionic liquid (IL)-based liquid-liquid extraction using hydrophobic IL-water or hydrophilic IL/water-ethyl acetate biphasic systems. Factors that influence the distribution equilibrium of SIAs, including the structure and concentration of IL, pH value of the aqueous phase, and temperature, were investigated. Adequate distribution coefficients and selectivities over 7.0 were achieved with hydrophilic IL/water-ethyl acetate biphasic system. Through a laboratory-scale simulation of fractional extraction process containing four extraction stages and four scrubbing stages, genistein was separated from the SIA homologues with a purity of 95.3% and a recovery >90%.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014

One of the distinctive properties of ionic liquids over molecular solvents and inorganic salts: enhanced basicity stemming from the electrostatic environment and "free" microstructure.

Qiwei Yang; Huabin Xing; Zongbi Bao; Baogen Su; Zhiguo Zhang; Yiwen Yang; Sheng Dai; Qilong Ren

The basicity of ionic liquids (ILs) underlies many important IL-based processes including the dissolution and conversion of cellulose, the capture of CO2, and metal catalysis. In this work, we have disclosed the nature of the basicity of ILs, i.e., the difference between the basicity of IL and the basicity of the molecular solvent and inorganic salt, through a quantitative electrostatic and electronic analysis of the molecular surface for the first time. The results reveal one of the distinctive properties of ILs (enhanced basicity over molecular solvents and inorganic salts with the same basic site) stemming from their special electrostatic environment and microstructure. The enhancement is significant, from either the electrostatic aspect or the covalent aspect of basicity. The peculiar electrostatic environment of ILs leads to stronger basicity than similar molecular solvents, and the relatively freer microstructure of ILs contributes to the enhancement of basicity over their inorganic analogues. These results are highly instructive for better understanding the unique value of ILs and designing novel ILs to improve the efficiency of basicity-related processes.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2011

Direct quantification of mono- and di-d-α-tocopherol polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate by high performance liquid chromatography

Liyun Kong; Baogen Su; Z.B. Bao; Huabin Xing; Y.W. Yang; Qilong Ren

A simple and direct reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) method with UV detection was developed and validated for the determination of mono- and di-D-α-tocopherol polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate (TPGS 1000) in TPGS mixture. Before the HPLC analysis, mono- and di-TPGS 1000 were separated by simulated moving bed (SMB) chromatography system and characterized by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). The mass spectrometric results confirmed that the molar mass distribution of TPGS prepared in our laboratory was very close to that of the product of Eastman Chemical Company with similar n¯ (average polymerization degree), M(n)¯ (number-average molecular weight) and M(w)¯ (weight-average molecular weight). The HPLC analysis was carried out on a C30 analytical column with mobile phases comprised of acetonitrile (A) and isopropanol (B) in gradient conditions. Validation of the analytical method was done on the following parameters: system suitability, linearity, limits of detection and quantification, accuracy and precision, method robustness and solution stability. The linearity of the calibration curves for mono- and di-TPGS 1000 from both sources was found to be good (r(2)>0.9996). The recovery values were from 94.6% to 103.3% for mono-TPGS, and 93.5% to 103.3% for di-TPGS. This method could be successfully used in the direct quantification of mono- and di-TPGS in TPGS 1000 mixture using TPGS standards with similar molecular mass distributions although derived from different sources.

Collaboration


Dive into the Huabin Xing's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yun Su

Zhejiang University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Banglin Chen

University of Texas at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge