The identification and quantification of defects are undoubtedly thorough challenges in the characterization of “defect-engineered” metal–organic frameworks (MOFs). UiO-66, known for its exceptional stability and defect tolerance, has been a popular target for defect-engineering studies. Herein, we show that synthesizing UiO-66 in the presence of an excess of benzoic acid is a reliable method for obtaining UiO-66 samples with a very high concentration of missing-cluster defects, allowing one to modulate specific properties (i.e., surface area and hydrophobicity). This was elucidated by a multitechnique marriage of experimental and computational methods: a combination of PXRD, dissolution/1H NMR spectroscopy, and N2 sorption measurements was used to quantify the defect loading, while vibrational spectroscopies (FTIR and Raman) allowed us to unequivocally identify the defect structure by comparison with DFT-simulated spectra and visual analysis of the computed vibrational modes.

Effect of Benzoic Acid as a Modulator in the Structure of UiO-66: An Experimental and Computational Study

ATZORI, CESARE;MASCHIO, LORENZO;CIVALLERI, Bartolomeo;BONINO, Francesca Carla;LAMBERTI, Carlo;BORDIGA, Silvia
2017-01-01

Abstract

The identification and quantification of defects are undoubtedly thorough challenges in the characterization of “defect-engineered” metal–organic frameworks (MOFs). UiO-66, known for its exceptional stability and defect tolerance, has been a popular target for defect-engineering studies. Herein, we show that synthesizing UiO-66 in the presence of an excess of benzoic acid is a reliable method for obtaining UiO-66 samples with a very high concentration of missing-cluster defects, allowing one to modulate specific properties (i.e., surface area and hydrophobicity). This was elucidated by a multitechnique marriage of experimental and computational methods: a combination of PXRD, dissolution/1H NMR spectroscopy, and N2 sorption measurements was used to quantify the defect loading, while vibrational spectroscopies (FTIR and Raman) allowed us to unequivocally identify the defect structure by comparison with DFT-simulated spectra and visual analysis of the computed vibrational modes.
2017
Inglese
Esperti anonimi
121
17
9312
9324
13
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b00483
MOF, Defect-engineering, FTIR, Raman, DFT Calculations, PXRD, NMR
NORVEGIA
1 – prodotto con file in versione Open Access (allegherò il file al passo 6 - Carica)
262
9
Atzori, Cesare; Shearer, Greig C.; Maschio, Lorenzo; Civalleri, Bartolomeo; Bonino, Francesca; Lamberti, Carlo; Svelle, Stian; Lillerud, Karl Petter; ...espandi
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
partially_open
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1639232
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