4.6 Article

Effect of Linker Structure and Functionalization on Secondary Gas Formation in Metal-Organic Frameworks

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 127, Issue 13, Pages 2881-2888

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.2c07751

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Rare-earth terephthalic acid (BDC)-based MOFs are potential materials for acid gas separation and adsorption. However, acid gases can react with BDC linkers to form protonated acid gases as a degradation mechanism. Gas-phase computational approaches were used to identify the formation energies of these acid gases. The design of stable MOFs for acid gas separation needs to balance adsorption performance with linker degradation.
Rare-earth terephthalic acid (BDC)-based metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are promising candidate materials for acid gas separation and adsorption from flue gas streams. However, previous simulations have shown that acid gases (H2O, NO2, and SO2) react with the hydroxyl on the BDC linkers to form protonated acid gases as a potential degradation mechanism. Herein, gas-phase computational approaches were used to identify the formation energies of these secondary protonated acid gases across multiple BDC linker molecules. Formation energies for secondary protonated acid gases were evaluated using both density functional theory (DFT) and correlated wave function methods for varying BDC-gas reaction mechanisms. Upon validation of DFT to reproduce wave function calculation results, rotated conformational linkers and chemically functionalized BDC linkers with -OH, -NH2, and -SH were investigated. The calculations show that the rotational conformation affects the molecule stability. Double-functionalized BDC linkers, where two functional groups are substituted onto BDC, showed varied reaction energies depending on whether the functional groups donate or withdraw electrons from the aromatic system. Based on these results, BDC linker design must balance adsorption performance with degradation via linker dehydrogenation for the design of stable MOFs for acid gas separations.

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