Crystalline Nanochannels with Pendant Azobenzene Groups: Steric or Polar Effects on Gas Adsorption and Diffusion?
Hubiao HuangHiroshi SatoTakuzo AidaPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
An azobenzene-containing, zirconium-based metal-organic framework (AzoMOF), upon irradiation with ultraviolet (UV) light at 365 ± 10 nm, underwent trans-to-cis isomerization of its azobenzene pendants to furnish the cis-isomer content of 21% (AzoMOF21%) in 30 min at the photostationary state and underwent backward isomerization into AzoMOF1% upon either irradiation with visible light (420-480 nm) or heating. When the cis-isomer content increased, the diffusion rate and amount of CO2 adsorbed into the nanochannels of AzoMOF decreased considerably. When erythrosine B, a polarity-probing guest, was used, it showed a red shift upon exposure of AzoMOF20%⊃EB to visible light, indicating that the interior environment of AzoMOF turns less polar as the trans-isomer content becomes higher. In sharp contrast, the adsorption profiles of AzoMOF15% and AzoMOF1% for Ar having an analogous kinetic diameter to CO2 but no quadrupole moment and a smaller polarizability were virtually identical to one another. Therefore, it is likely that CO2 experiences a dominant effect of a polar effect rather than a steric effect in the crystalline nanochannels.
Keyphrases
- visible light
- metal organic framework
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- photodynamic therapy
- aqueous solution
- mass spectrometry
- magnetic resonance
- mental health
- computed tomography
- radiation therapy
- single molecule
- light emitting
- high resolution
- optic nerve
- contrast enhanced
- optical coherence tomography
- gas chromatography