4.8 Article

Symmetry-Guided Synthesis of N,N′-Bicarbazole and Porphyrin-Based Mixed-Ligand Metal-Organic Frameworks: Light Harvesting and Energy Transfer

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 48, Pages 20411-20418

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c10291

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Divisions of Chemistry (CHE), National Science Foundation [NSF/CHE-1346572]
  2. Materials Research (DMR), National Science Foundation [NSF/CHE-1346572]
  3. U.S. DOE Office of Science [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  4. Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  5. [NSF/CBET-1706632]
  6. [NSF/CBET-1706971]

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This study presents the design and synthesis of a highly porous and photoactive mixed-ligand MOF, showcasing the potential of MOFs as an ideal platform for studying energy transfer processes and the possibility of directly utilizing EnT processes in photocatalytic applications.
In the past decades, many attempts have been made to mimic the energy transfer (EnT) in photosynthesis, a key process occurring in nature that is of fundamental significance in solar fuels and sustainable energy. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), an emerging class of porous crystalline materials self-assembled from organic linkers and metal or metal cluster nodes, offer an ideal platform for the exploration of directional EnT phenomena. However, placing energy donor and acceptor moieties within the same framework with an atomistic precision appears to be a major synthesis challenge. In this work, we report the design and synthesis of a highly porous and photoactive N,N'bicarbazole- and porphyrin-based mixed-ligand MOF, namely, NPF-500H(2)TCPP (NPF = Nebraska porous framework; H2TCPP = meso-tetrakis(4-carboxyphenyl)porphyrin), where the secondary ligand H2TCPP is incorporated precisely through the open metal sites of the equatorial plane of the octahedron cage resulting from the underlying (4,8) connected network of NPF-500. The efficient EnT process from N,N'-bicarbazole to porphyrin in NPF-500-H2TCPP was captured by time-resolved spectroscopy and exemplified by photocatalytic oxidation of thioanisole. These results demonstrate not only the capability of NPF-500 as the scaffold to precisely arrange the donor-acceptor assembly for the EnT process but also the potential to directly utilize the EnT process for photocatalytic applications.

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