Transition metal material captures inert neon

Written by Charles Quigg for Chemistry World

Graphical AbstractA team of scientists has discovered the first interactions between neon and a transition metal. Their discovery opens up the possibility of new methods to capture the inert gas, as well as other unreactive elements such as helium.

Although it’s found in advertising and eye-catching signage, neon is also incorporated into lasers used in the photolithographic printing of semiconductors. Neon is abundant in the universe, but its inert nature means that it escapes the Earth’s atmosphere. The noble gas is also hard to isolate. Current methods involve liquefying air and distilling the gas in a liquid form – an expensive and inefficient approach.

A team led by Peter Wood at the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre, UK, has discovered that, under particular conditions, the inert gas interacts with a transition metal. Not only is this the first interaction ever observed, but it may kick-start new approaches in capturing unreactive noble gases.

Read the full article in Chemistry World >>>


Peter A. Wood, Amy A. Sarjeant, Andrey A. Yakovenko, Suzanna C. Ward and Colin R. Groom
Chem. Commun., 2016, 52, 10048-10051
DOI: 10.1039/C6CC04808K, Communication
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