| Literature DB >> 30467390 |
Sujing Wang1, Mohammad Wahiduzzaman2, Louisa Davis2, Antoine Tissot1, William Shepard3, Jérôme Marrot4, Charlotte Martineau-Corcos4,5, Djemel Hamdane6, Guillaume Maurin2, Sabine Devautour-Vinot7, Christian Serre8.
Abstract
Proton conductive materials are of significant importance and highly desired for clean energy-related applications. Discovery of practical metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with high proton conduction remains a challenge due to the use of toxic chemicals, inconvenient ligand preparation and complication of production at scale for the state-of-the-art candidates. Herein, we report a zirconium-MOF, MIP-202(Zr), constructed from natural α-amino acid showing a high and steady proton conductivity of 0.011 S cm-1 at 363 K and under 95% relative humidity. This MOF features a cost-effective, green and scalable preparation with a very high space-time yield above 7000 kg m-3 day-1. It exhibits a good chemical stability under various conditions, including solutions of wide pH range and boiling water. Finally, a comprehensive molecular simulation was carried out to shed light on the proton conduction mechanism. All together these features make MIP-202(Zr) one of the most promising candidates to approach the commercial benchmark Nafion.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30467390 PMCID: PMC6250719 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-07414-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Crystal structural features of MIP-202(Zr). a The 12-connected Zr6(µ3-O)4(µ3-OH)4(COO−)12 cluster SBU. b An aspartic acid linker. c The crystal structure of MIP-202(Zr) viewed along the a-axis. d The crystal structure of MIP-202(Zr) viewed along the (101) plane. Zr atoms or polyhedra, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and hydrogen atoms are in light blue, red, gray, dark blue, and white, respectively
Fig. 2Nyquist plots from AC impedance data for MIP-202(Zr). a at 0% RH. b at 95% RH
Fig. 3Radial distribution functions calculated from the average over the MC configurations considered for hydrated MIP-202(Zr) at 90 °C. a N and H of NH3+ to O(H2O) atomic pairs. b O and H of µ3-OH to O(H2O) atomic pairs. c Cl to O and H of H2O atomic pairs. d O and H of H2O to O(H2O) atomic pairs
Fig. 4Illustration of the hydrogen bonding in MIP-202(Zr) structure. a Multiple water-mediated hydrogen-bonded network as evidenced by MC-NVT simulations performed at 90 °C for hydrated MIP-202(Zr). b A representative hydrogen-bonded water-bridge network formed by the NH3 and H2O molecules. c Hydrogen bonding with the possible involvement of Cl− ions (MOF skeleton in gray, nitrogen of NH3+ group in blue, Cl– ions in green and oxygen of µ3-OH, and H2O molecule in red)