4.7 Article

Solvent-modified dynamic porosity in chiral 3D kagome frameworks

Journal

DALTON TRANSACTIONS
Volume 42, Issue 22, Pages 7871-7879

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3dt00096f

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [FT0991910, FT100100400, FT100100514]
  2. CSIRO Materials Science and Engineering
  3. Science and Industry Endowment Fund
  4. Australian Research Council

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Dynamically porous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with a chiral quartz-based structure have been synthesized from the multidentate ligand 2,2'-dihydroxybiphenyl-4,4'-dicarboxylate (H(2)diol). Compounds [Ni(II)(H(2)diol)(S)(2)]center dot xS (where S = DMF or DEF) show marked changes in 77 K N-2 uptake between partially desolvated [Ni(II)(H(2)diol)(S)(2)] (only the pore solvent is removed) and fully desolvated [Ni(II)(H(2)diol)] forms. Furthermore, [Ni(II)(H(2)diol)(DMF)(2)] displays additional solvent-dependent porosity through the rotation of DMF molecules attached to the axial coordination sites of the Ni(II) centre. A unique feature of the four coordinate Ni(II) centre in [Ni(II)(H(2)diol)] is the dynamic response to its chemical environment. Exposure of [Ni(II)(H(2)diol)] to H2O and MeOH vapour leads to coordination of both axial sites of the Ni centres and to the generation of a solvated framework, whereas exposure to EtOH, DMF, acetone, and MeCN does not lead to any change in metal coordination or structure metrics. MeOH vapour adsorption was able to be tracked by time-dependent magnetometry as the solvated and desolvated structures have different magnetic moments. Solvated and desolvated forms of the MOF show remarkable differences in their thermal expansivities; [Ni(II)(H(2)diol)(DMF)(2)]center dot DMF displays marked positive thermal expansion (PTE) in the c-axis, yet near to zero thermal expansion, between 90 and 450 K, is observed for [Ni(II)(H(2)diol)]. These new MOF architectures demonstrate a dynamic structural and colourimetric response to selected adsorbates via a unique mechanism that involves a reversible change in the coordination environment of the metal centre. These coordination changes are mediated throughout the MOF by rotational mobility about the biaryl bond of the ligand.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available