open access publication

Article, 2024

Water Promotes Melting of a Metal–Organic Framework

Chemistry of Materials, ISSN 1520-5002, 0897-4756, Volume 36, 6, Pages 2756-2766, 10.1021/acs.chemmater.3c02873

Contributors

Sørensen, Søren Strandskov 0000-0003-2230-7823 (Corresponding author) [1] Christensen, Anders K R 0009-0005-8613-9808 [1] Bouros-Bandrabur, Elena A. [1] Andersen, Emil S. [1] Christiansen, Heidi F. [1] Lang, Sofie [1] Cao, Fengming 0000-0003-0761-5019 [1] Jalaludeen, M Faizal Ussama 0000-0003-0077-691X [1] Christensen, Johan F S [1] Winters, Wessel M W [1] Andersen, Bettina Pilgaard 0000-0001-6148-6989 [2] Nielsen, Anders Bodholt 0000-0002-3937-1170 [2] Nielsen, Niels Christian 0000-0003-2978-4366 [2] Ravnsbæk, Dorthe B Bomholdt 0000-0002-8172-3985 [2] Kristensen, Peter K. [1] Yue, Yuan-Zheng 0000-0002-6048-5236 [1] Smedskjaer, Morten Mattrup 0000-0003-0476-2021 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aalborg University
  2. [NORA names: AAU Aalborg University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Aarhus University
  4. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Water is one of the most reactive and abundant molecules on Earth, and it is thus crucial to understand its reactivity with various material families. One of the big unknown questions is how water in liquid and vapor forms impact the fast-emerging class of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). Here, we discover that high-pressure water vapor drastically modifies the structure and hence the dynamic, thermodynamic, and mechanical properties of MOF glasses. In detail, we find that an archetypical MOF (ZIF-62) is extremely sensitive to heat treatments performed at 460 °C and water vapor pressures up to ∼110 bar. Both the melting and glass transition temperatures decrease remarkably (by >100 °C), and simultaneously, hardness and Young's modulus increase by up to 100% under very mild treatment conditions (<20 bar of hydrothermal pressure). Structural analyses suggest water to partially coordinate to Zn in the form of a hydroxide ion by replacing a bridging imidazolate-based linker. The work provides insight into the role of hot-compressed water in influencing the structure and properties of MOF glasses and opens a new route for systematically changing the thermodynamics and kinetics of MOF liquids and thus altering the thermal and mechanical properties of the resulting MOF glasses.

Keywords

Earth, Young, Young's modulus increase, ZIF-62, Zn, abundant molecules, analysis, classes of metal-organic frameworks, conditions, family, form, framework, glass, glass transition temperature, hardness, heat treatment, high-pressure water vapor, hot compressed water, hydroxide, hydroxide ions, increase, ions, kinetics, linker, liquid, material family, materials, mechanical properties, melting, metal-organic framework glasses, metal-organic frameworks, mild treatment conditions, modulus increase, molecules, pressure, promoter melting, properties, reactivity, sensitive to heat treatment, structural analysis, structure, temperature, thermodynamics, transition temperature, treatment, treatment conditions, vapor, vapor form, vapor pressure, water, water vapor, water vapor pressure

Funders

  • China Scholarship Council
  • Danish Agency for Science and Higher Education
  • European Research Council
  • European Union
  • Novo Nordisk Foundation
  • European Commission

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