Abstract
Multiple organic functionalities can now be apportioned into nanoscale domains within a metal-coordinated framework, posing the following question: how do we control the resulting combination of "heterogeneity and order"? Here, we report the creation of a metal-organic framework, MOF-2000, whose two component types are incorporated in a 2:1 ratio, even when the ratio of component types in the starting solution is varied by an order of magnitude. Statistical mechanical modeling suggests that this robust 2:1 ratio has a nonequilibrium origin, resulting from kinetic trapping of component types during framework growth. Our simulations show how other "magic number" ratios of components can be obtained by modulating the topology of a framework and the noncovalent interactions between component types, a finding that may aid the rational design of functional multicomponent materials.
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Sue, A. C. H., Mannige, R. V., Deng, H., Cao, D., Wang, C., Gándara, F., … Yaghi, O. M. (2015). Heterogeneity of functional groups in a metal-organic framework displays magic number ratios. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(18), 5591–5596. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1416417112
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