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Water-Stable Fluorous Metal-Organic Frameworks with Open Metal Sites and Amine Groups for Efficient Urea Electrocatalytic Oxidation.

Jinhu WangReza AbazariSoheila SanatiAleksander EjsmontJoanna GoscianskaYingtang ZhouDeepak P Dubal
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2023)
Urea oxidation reaction (UOR) is one of the promising alternative anodic reactions to water oxidation that has attracted extensive attention in green hydrogen production. The application of specifically designed electrocatalysts capable of declining energy consumption and environmental consequences is one of the major challenges in this field. Therefore, the goal is to achieve a resistant, low-cost, and environmentally friendly electrocatalyst. Herein, a water-stable fluorinated Cu(II) metalorganic framework (MOF) {[Cu 2 (L)(H 2 O) 2 ]·(5DMF)(4H 2 O)} n (Cu-FMOF-NH 2 ; H 4 L = 3,5-bis(2,4-dicarboxylic acid)-4-(trifluoromethyl)aniline) is developed utilizing an angular tetracarboxylic acid ligand that incorporates both trifluoromethyl (-CF 3 ) and amine (-NH 2 ) groups. The tailored structure of Cu-FMOF-NH 2 where linkers are connected by fluoride bridges and surrounded by dicopper nodes reveals a 4,24T1 topology. When employed as electrocatalyst, Cu-FMOF-NH 2 requires only 1.31 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE) to deliver 10 mA cm -2 current density in 1.0 m KOH with 0.33 m urea electrolyte and delivered an even higher current density (50 mA cm -2 ) at 1.47 V versus RHE. This performance is superior to several reported catalysts including commercial RuO 2 catalyst with overpotential of 1.52 V versus RHE. This investigation opens new opportunities to develop and utilize pristine MOFs as a potential electrocatalyst for various catalytic reactions.
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