观点科学

Can molecular Lego save the planet?

The Nobel Prize-winning MOFs could be used to mop up pollutants, turn toxic substances benign and make water from desert air

The writer is a science commentator

The idea struck Richard Robson, a British-born chemist at Melbourne University, as he was building large wooden models of crystals to show in undergraduate lectures. Diamond, for example, is a repeating pattern where each carbon atom binds to four other carbon atoms in a tetrahedral pattern — and easily duplicated with wooden balls representing carbon atoms and rods for chemical bonds.

What if, Robson pondered in the 1970s, metals and organic (carbon-based) molecules could link up to make similar kinds of 3D patterns? Around a decade later, his experiments showed that metal ions (metal atoms that carry a charge) and organic molecules could indeed form a viable crystal structure: an infinitely repeating pattern filled with vast spaces, making the material a porous sponge.

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