Abstract
Conductive metal-organic frameworks (cMOFs) manifest great potential in modern electrical devices due to their porous nature and the ability to conduct charges in a regular network. cMOFs applied in electrical devices normally hybridize with other materials, especially a substrate. Therefore, the precise control of the interface between cMOF and a substrate is particularly crucial. However, the unexplored interface chemistry of cMOFs makes the controlled synthesis and advanced characterization of high-quality thin films, particularly challenging. Herein, we report the development of a simplified synthesis method to grow "face-on"and "edge-on"cMOF nanofilms on substrates, and the establishment of operando characterization methodology using atomic force microscopy and X-ray, thereby demonstrating the relationship between the soft structure of surface-mounted oriented networks and their characteristic conductive functions. As a result, crystallinity of cMOF nanofilms with a thickness down to a few nanometers is obtained, the possible growth mechanisms are proposed, and the interesting anisotropic softness-dependent conducting properties (over 2 orders of magnitude change) of the cMOF are also illustrated.
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Yao, M. S., Otake, K. I., Koganezawa, T., Ogasawara, M., Asakawa, H., Tsujimoto, M., … Kitagawa, S. (2023). Growth mechanisms and anisotropic softness-dependent conductivity of orientation-controllable metal-organic framework nanofilms. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(40). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2305125120
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