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Generation of Site-Selective Structural Vacancies in a Multinary Metal-Organic Framework for Enhanced Catalysis.

Junyi WangYin RaoYichen WuLingyi YangQiaowei Li
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Generating structural vacancies in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) by partially removing the inorganic and organic units from the scaffolds is an effective strategy to modulate the pore parameters of the extended structures. However, pore enlargement is accomplished at the cost of loss in the number of active sites in typical MOFs, since dissociations of coordination linkages to create vacancies are not site-selective. Here, we performed site-specific vacancy generation in a multinary MOF (FDM-6) by selectively hydrolyzing the weak Zn─carboxylate linkages and keeping the strong Cu─pyrazolate linkages untouched. Surface area and pore size range of the materials could be systematically tuned by adjusting the water content and hydrolysis time. More than 56% of the Zn(II) sites in FDM-6 could be vacant, as evidenced by the atom occupancy analysis using powder X-ray diffraction, while most of the redox-active Cu sites are held in the backbone. The vacancies create highly connected mesopores, thus guaranteeing facile transportation of the guest molecules toward the active sites. Compared with the pristine MOF, FDM-6 with site-selective vacancies shows enhanced catalytic activity in bulky aromatic alcohol oxidation. Overall, the multinary MOF provides a platform in which both pore size enhancement and full retainment of active sites could be delivered in one framework by simple vacancy engineering.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • high resolution
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  • magnetic resonance
  • high throughput
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  • mass spectrometry
  • single cell
  • quantum dots