Fast and selective fluoride ion conduction in sub-1-nanometer metal-organic framework channels

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Abstract

Biological fluoride ion channels are sub-1-nanometer protein pores with ultrahigh F− conductivity and selectivity over other halogen ions. Developing synthetic F− channels with biological-level selectivity is highly desirable for ion separations such as water defluoridation, but it remains a great challenge. Here we report synthetic F− channels fabricated from zirconium-based metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), UiO-66-X (X = H, NH2, and N+(CH3)3). These MOFs are comprised of nanometer-sized cavities connected by sub-1-nanometer-sized windows and have specific F− binding sites along the channels, sharing some features of biological F− channels. UiO-66-X channels consistently show ultrahigh F− conductivity up to ~10 S m−1, and ultrahigh F−/Cl− selectivity, from ~13 to ~240. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that the ultrahigh F− conductivity and selectivity can be ascribed mainly to the high F− concentration in the UiO-66 channels, arising from specific interactions between F− ions and F− binding sites in the MOF channels.

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Li, X., Zhang, H., Wang, P., Hou, J., Lu, J., Easton, C. D., … Wang, H. (2019). Fast and selective fluoride ion conduction in sub-1-nanometer metal-organic framework channels. Nature Communications , 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-10420-9

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