4.6 Article

Porphyrin based metal-organic frameworks: highly sensitive materials for optical sensing of oxygen in gas phase

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C
Volume 9, Issue 47, Pages 17099-17112

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1tc03735h

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Funding

  1. Graz University of Technology [LP-03]

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The optical oxygen sensing capabilities of porphyrin-based metal-organic frameworks were studied, revealing high oxygen permeability and bimolecular quenching constants. The frameworks showed exceptional gas transport, large pore sizes, and effective isolation of the sensing indicators. These materials have potential applications in detecting oxygen in trace and ultra-trace ranges.
The optical oxygen sensing capabilities of the porphyrin-based metal-organic frameworks, PCN-224, Pt(ii)PCN-224 and Pd(ii)PCN-224 were investigated. The bimolecular quenching constants (k(q)) of 37 000 (PCN-224), 6700 (Pd(ii)PCN-224) and 3900 Pa-1 s(-1) (Pt(ii)PCN-224) were found and reveal an exceptionally high oxygen-permeability for these materials. Fast gas transport within the network, large pore sizes, and electronic and spatial isolation of the porphyrin indicator in the framework are held responsible for the unprecedentedly high k(q) values. PCN-224 shows 6.7 ns fluorescence lifetime and the fluorescence in air is quenched 4.2-fold. The metal-organic frameworks based on phosphorescent Pt(ii) and Pd(ii) porphyrins possess significantly longer decay times of 18.6 and 390 mu s, respectively, and are suited to detect oxygen in trace and ultra-trace ranges with limits of detection of 1 and 0.015 Pa, respectively. Apart from free-standing crystals, also metal-organic frameworks supported on different fibrous substrates (poly(acrylonitrile) nanofibers, glass fibres), and flat substrates (TLC silica-gel, poly(amide) filter) were prepared in order to provide oxygen sensor materials of practical use. Electrospun and thermally treated poly(acrylonitrile) nanofibers were found to be particularly favourable and the resulting composite material exhibited the same sensitivity as the free crystals. All sensing materials show reversible cross-talk to humidity at levels up to 53% relative humidity but demonstrate a drastic decrease of oxygen sensitivity at high humidity levels and when exposed to water. A decrease of the quenching constant with rising temperature indicates an important role of surface-adsorbed oxygen in the quenching process.

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