| Literature DB >> 27385527 |
Debasis Banerjee1,2, Hao Wang1, Anna M Plonka3,4, Thomas J Emge1, John B Parise3, Jing Li5.
Abstract
Gate-opening is a unique and interesting phenomenon commonly observed in flexible porous frameworks, where the pore characteristics and/or crystal structures change in response to external stimuli such as adding or removing guest molecules. For gate-opening that is induced by gas adsorption, the pore-opening pressure often varies for different adsorbate molecules and, thus, can be applied to selectively separate a gas mixture. The detailed understanding of this phenomenon is of fundamental importance to the design of industrially applicable gas-selective sorbents, which remains under investigated due to the lack of direct structural evidence for such systems. We report a mechanistic study of gas-induced gate-opening process of a microporous metal-organic framework, [Mn(ina)2 ] (ina=isonicotinate) associated with commensurate adsorption, by a combination of several analytical techniques including single crystal X-ray diffraction, in situ powder X-ray diffraction coupled with differential scanning calorimetry (XRD-DSC), and gas adsorption-desorption methods. Our study reveals that the pronounced and reversible gate opening/closing phenomena observed in [Mn(ina)2 ] are coupled with a structural transition that involves rotation of the organic linker molecules as a result of interaction of the framework with adsorbed gas molecules including carbon dioxide and propane. The onset pressure to open the gate correlates with the extent of such interaction.Entities:
Keywords: coordination chemistry; gas adsorption; gate-opening; hydrocarbon adsorption; metal-organic frameworks
Year: 2016 PMID: 27385527 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201601784
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236