Control of structural flexibility of layered-pillared metal-organic frameworks anchored at surfaces

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Abstract

Flexible metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are structurally flexible, porous, crystalline solids that show a structural transition in response to a stimulus. If MOF-based solid-state and microelectronic devices are to be capable of leveraging such structural flexibility, then the integration of MOF thin films into a device configuration is crucial. Here we report the targeted and precise anchoring of Cu-based alkylether-functionalised layered-pillared MOF crystallites onto substrates via stepwise liquid-phase epitaxy. The structural transformation during methanol sorption is monitored by in-situ grazing incidence X-ray diffraction. Interestingly, spatially-controlled anchoring of the flexible MOFs on the surface induces a distinct structural responsiveness which is different from the bulk powder and can be systematically controlled by varying the crystallite characteristics, for instance dimensions and orientation. This fundamental understanding of thin-film flexibility is of paramount importance for the rational design of MOF-based devices utilising the structural flexibility in specific applications such as selective sensors.

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Wannapaiboon, S., Schneemann, A., Hante, I., Tu, M., Epp, K., Semrau, A. L., … Fischer, R. A. (2019). Control of structural flexibility of layered-pillared metal-organic frameworks anchored at surfaces. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-08285-5

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