| Literature DB >> 26900671 |
Ruyi Zou1,2,3, Pei-Zhou Li1,3, Yong-Fei Zeng1,3, Jia Liu3,4, Ruo Zhao4, Hui Duan1, Zhong Luo1, Jin-Gui Wang1, Ruqiang Zou3,4, Yanli Zhao1,3,5.
Abstract
A highly porous metal-organic framework (MOF) incorporating two kinds of second building units (SBUs), i.e., dimeric paddlewheel (Zn2 (COO)4 ) and tetrameric (Zn4 (O)(CO2 )6 ), is successfully assembled by the reaction of a tricarboxylate ligand with Zn(II) ion. Subsequently, single-crystal-to-single-crystal metal cation exchange using the constructed MOF is investigated, and the results show that Cu(II) and Co(II) ions can selectively be introduced into the MOF without compromising the crystallinity of the pristine framework. This metal cation-exchangeable MOF provides a useful platform for studying the metal effect on both gas adsorption and catalytic activity of the resulted MOFs. While the gas adsorption experiments reveal that Cu(II) and Co(II) exchanged samples exhibit comparable CO2 adsorption capability to the pristine Zn(II) -based MOF under the same conditions, catalytic investigations for the cycloaddition reaction of CO2 with epoxides into related carbonates demonstrate that Zn(II) -based MOF affords the highest catalytic activity as compared with Cu(II) and Co(II) exchanged ones. Molecular dynamic simulations are carried out to further confirm the catalytic performance of these constructed MOFs on chemical fixation of CO2 to carbonates. This research sheds light on how metal exchange can influence intrinsic properties of MOFs.Entities:
Keywords: crystal engineering; gas adsorption; heterogeneous catalysis; metal exchange; metal-organic frameworks
Year: 2016 PMID: 26900671 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201503741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281