Interlinker Hydrogen Bonds Govern CO2Adsorption in a Series of Flexible 2D Diacylhydrazone/Isophthalate-Based MOFs: Influence of Metal Center, Linker Substituent, and Activation Temperature

17Citations
Citations of this article
19Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Four new layered flexible metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) containing a diacylhydrazone moiety, namely, guest-filled [Zn2(iso)2(tdih)2]n (1), [Zn2(NH2iso)2(tdih)2]n (2), [Cd2(iso)2(tdih)2]n (3) and [Cd2(NH2iso)2(tdih)2]n (4) were synthesized using terephthalaldehyde di-isonicotinoylhydrazone (tdih) as a linear ditopic linker as well as isophtalate (iso) or 5-aminoisophthalate (NH2iso) as angular colinkers. The MOFs with hexacoordinated cadmium centers feature two-dimensional pore systems as compared to the MOFs with pentacoordinated zinc centers showing either zero-dimensional or mixed zero-/one-dimensional voids, as evidenced by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. In contrast to the frameworks based on isophtalates which do not show any significant gas uptakes, introduction of amino-substituted linker enables CO2 adsorption. Gently activated aminoisophthalate-based frameworks, that is, guest-exchanged in methanol and heated to 100 °C, show reversible gated CO2 adsorptions at 195 K, whereas the increase of activation temperature to 150 °C or more leads to one-step isotherms and lower adsorption capacities. X-ray diffraction and IR spectroscopy reveal significant structural differences in interlayer hydrogen bonding upon activation of materials at higher temperatures. The work emphasizes the role of hydrogen bonds in crystal engineering of layered materials and the importance of activation conditions in such systems.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Roztocki, K., Szufla, M., Bon, V., Senkovska, I., Kaskel, S., & Matoga, D. (2020). Interlinker Hydrogen Bonds Govern CO2Adsorption in a Series of Flexible 2D Diacylhydrazone/Isophthalate-Based MOFs: Influence of Metal Center, Linker Substituent, and Activation Temperature. Inorganic Chemistry, 59(15), 10717–10726. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c01182

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free