Login / Signup

Interrogating Light-initiated Dynamics in Metal-Organic Frameworks with Time-resolved Spectroscopy.

Brian PattengaleSarah OstreshCharles A SchmuttenmaerJens Neu
Published in: Chemical reviews (2021)
Time-resolved spectroscopy is an essential part of both fundamental and applied chemical research. Such techniques access light-initiated dynamics on time scales ranging from femtosecond to microsecond. Many techniques falling under this description have been applied to gain significant insight into metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), a diverse class of porous coordination polymers. MOFs are highly tunable, both compositionally and structurally, and unique challenges are encountered in applying time-resolved spectroscopy to interrogate their light-initiated properties. These properties involve various excited state mechanisms such as crystallographically defined energy transfer, charge transfer, and localization within the framework, photoconductivity, and structural dynamics. The field of time-resolved MOF spectroscopic studies is quite nascent; each original report cited in this review was published within the past decade. As such, this review is a timely and comprehensive summary of the most significant contributions in this emerging field, with focuses on the overarching spectroscopic concepts applied and on identifying key challenges and future outlooks moving forward.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • energy transfer
  • high resolution
  • single molecule
  • molecular docking
  • solid state
  • quantum dots
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • current status
  • mass spectrometry