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Fabrication of Multifunctional Electronic Textiles Using Oxidative Restructuring of Copper into a Cu-Based Metal-Organic Framework.

Aileen M EagletonMichael KoRobert M StolzNataliia VereshchukZheng MengLukasz MendeckiAdelaide M LevensonConnie HuangKatherine C MacVeaghAkbar Mahdavi-ShakibJohn J MahleGregory W PetersonBrian G FrederickKatherine A Mirica
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
This paper describes a novel synthetic approach for the conversion of zero-valent copper metal into a conductive two-dimensional layered metal-organic framework (MOF) based on 2,3,6,7,10,11-hexahydroxytriphenylene (HHTP) to form Cu 3 (HHTP) 2 . This process enables patterning of Cu 3 (HHTP) 2 onto a variety of flexible and porous woven (cotton, silk, nylon, nylon/cotton blend, and polyester) and non-woven (weighing paper and filter paper) substrates with microscale spatial resolution. The method produces conductive textiles with sheet resistances of 0.1-10.1 MΩ/cm 2 , depending on the substrate, and uniform conformal coatings of MOFs on textile swatches with strong interfacial contact capable of withstanding chemical and physical stresses, such as detergent washes and abrasion. These conductive textiles enable simultaneous detection and detoxification of nitric oxide and hydrogen sulfide, achieving part per million limits of detection in dry and humid conditions. The Cu 3 (HHTP) 2 MOF also demonstrated filtration capabilities of H 2 S, with uptake capacity up to 4.6 mol/kg MOF . X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and diffuse reflectance infrared spectroscopy show that the detection of NO and H 2 S with Cu 3 (HHTP) 2 is accompanied by the transformation of these species to less toxic forms, such as nitrite and/or nitrate and copper sulfide and S x species, respectively. These results pave the way for using conductive MOFs to construct extremely robust electronic textiles with multifunctional performance characteristics.
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