Texas A&M Chemist Delivers Cleaner Air With Novel Carbon-Capture Technique

Ask Texas A&M University chemist Dr. Hong-Cai "Joe" Zhou to describe his research in simple terms, and more often than not, he'll draw on a favorite analogy from childhood: playing with LEGOs.

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COLLEGE STATION -- Ask Texas A&M University chemist Dr. Hong-Cai "Joe" Zhou to describe his research in simple terms, and more often than not, he'll draw on a favorite analogy from childhood: playing with LEGOs.

But if you're tempted to view his work as child's play, you might want to think again. The building blocks he and his group specialize in actually are a recently developed, increasingly versatile class of materials known as metal-organic frameworks (MOF).

An emerging technology in the scientific community, MOF are porous crystalline polymers made up of metal ions or metal-containing components and organic ligands. Zhou's group, in collaboration with Dr. Hae-Kwon Jeong and Dr. Perla B. Balbuena in the Department of Chemical Engineering, assembles MOF materials with profound potential for cleaner energy across the globe.

"It's very fair to say that, in the last decade, the fastest-growing field in chemistry is the study of metal-organic frameworks," Zhou says. "The MOF field was formed only about 15 years ago, but it has already shown a lot of promise. We are just one of many teams worldwide working with this exciting new type of material, because the scope of the research is enormous."

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