| Literature DB >> 33523530 |
Dario Ferreira Sanchez1, Johannes Ihli1, Damin Zhang2,3, Thomas Rohrbach2, Patric Zimmermann2, Jinhee Lee2, Camelia N Borca1, Natascha Böhlen2, Daniel Grolimund1, Jeroen A van Bokhoven2,4, Marco Ranocchiari2.
Abstract
The introduction of structural defects in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), often achieved through the fractional use of defective linkers, is emerging as a means to refine the properties of existing MOFs. These linkers, missing coordination fragments, create unsaturated framework nodes that may alter the properties of the MOF. A property-targeted utilization of this approach demands an understanding of the structure of the defect-engineered MOF. We demonstrate that full-field X-ray absorption near-edge structure computed tomography can help to improve our understanding. This was demonstrated by visualizing the chemical heterogeneity found in defect-engineered HKUST-1 MOF crystals. A non-uniform incorporation and zonation of the defective linker was discovered, leading to the presence of clusters of a second coordination polymer within HKUST-1. The former is suggested to be responsible, in part, for altered MOF properties; thereby, advocating for a spatio-chemically resolved characterization of MOFs.Entities:
Keywords: Composite materials; HKUST-1; X-ray absorption spectroscopy; X-ray tomography; defect engineering
Year: 2021 PMID: 33523530 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202013422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336