Epitaxial Growth of γ-Cyclodextrin-Containing Metal-Organic Frameworks Based on a Host-Guest Strategy.
Dengke ShenGang WangZhichang LiuPeng LiKang CaiChuyang ChengYi ShiJi-Min HanChung-Wei KungXirui GongQing-Hui GuoHongliang ChenAndrew C-H SueYoussry Y BotrosAntonio FacchettiOmar K FarhaTobin J MarksJ Fraser StoddartPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
A class of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs)-namely CD-MOFs-obtained from natural products has been grown in an epitaxial fashion as films on the surfaces of glass substrates, which are modified with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of γ-cyclodextrin (γ-CD) molecules. The SAMs are created by host-guest complexation of γ-CD molecules with surface-functionalized pyrene units. The CD-MOF films have continuous polycrystalline morphology with a structurally out-of-plane ( c-axial) orientation, covering an area of several square millimeters, with a thickness of ∼2 μm. Furthermore, this versatile host-guest strategy has been applied successfully in the growth of CD-MOFs as the shell on the curved surface of microparticles as well as in the integration of CD-MOF films into electrochemical devices for sensing carbon dioxide. In striking contrast to the control devices prepared from CD-MOF crystalline powders, these CD-MOF film-based devices display an enhancement in proton conductance of up to 300-fold. In addition, the CD-MOF film-based device exhibits more rapid and highly reversible CO2-sensing cycles under ambient conditions, with a 50-fold decrease in conductivity upon exposure to CO2 for 3 s which is recovered within 10 s upon re-exposure to air.