4.8 Article

Stabilization of Scandium Terephthalate MOFs against Reversible Amorphization and Structural Phase Transition by Guest Uptake at Extreme Pressure

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 136, Issue 24, Pages 8606-8613

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja411934f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Royal Society of Edinburgh
  2. Scottish Government
  3. EPSRC [EP/J02077X/, EP/F009208/1]
  4. Leverhulme Trust
  5. EPSRC [EP/F009208/1, EP/K033646/1, EP/J02077X/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  6. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/J02077X/1, EP/K033646/1, EP/F009208/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Previous high-pressure experiments have shown that pressure-transmitting fluids composed of small molecules can be forced inside the pores of metal organic framework materials, where they can cause phase transitions and amorphization and can even induce porosity in conventionally nonporous materials. Here we report a combined high-pressure diffraction and computational study of the structural response to methanol uptake at high pressure on a scandium terephthalate MOF (Sc2BDC3, BDC = 1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) and its nitro-functionalized derivative (Sc-2(NO2- BDC)(3)) and compare it to direct compression behavior in a nonpenetrative hydrostatic fluid, Fluorinert-77. In Fluorinert-77, Sc2BDC3 displays amorphization above 0.1 GPa, reversible upon pressure release, whereas Sc-2(NO2-BDC)(3) undergoes a phase transition (C2/c to Fdd2) to a denser but topologically identical polymorph. In the presence of methanol, the reversible amorphization of Sc2BDC3 and the displacive phase transition of the nitro-form are completely inhibited (at least up to 3 GPa). Upon uptake of methanol on Sc2BDC3, the methanol molecules are found by diffraction to occupy two sites, with preferential relative filling of one site compared to the other: grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations support these experimental observations, and molecular dynamics simulations reveal the likely orientations of the methanol molecules, which are controlled at least in part by H-bonding interactions between guests. As well as revealing the atomistic origin of the stabilization of these MOFs against nonpenetrative hydrostatic fluids at high pressure, this study demonstrates a novel high-pressure approach to study adsorption within a porous framework as a function of increasing guest content, and so to determine the most energetically favorable adsorption sites.

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