TY - JOUR
T1 - Linker Exchange via Migration along the Backbone in Metal-Organic Frameworks
AU - Al Danaf, Nader
AU - Schrimpf, Waldemar
AU - Hirschle, Patrick
AU - Lamb, Don C.
AU - Ji, Zhe
AU - Wuttke, Stefan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2021/7/21
Y1 - 2021/7/21
N2 - In metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), organic linkers are subject to postsynthetic exchange (PSE) when new linkers reach sites of PSE by diffusion. Here, we show that during PSE, a bulky organic linker is able to penetrate narrow-window MOF crystals. The bulky linker migrates by continuously replacing the linkers gating the otherwise impassable windows and serially occupying an array of backbone sites, a mechanism we term through-backbone diffusion. A necessary consequence of this process is the accumulation of missing-linker defects along the diffusion trajectories. Using fluorescence intensity and lifetime imaging microscopy, we found a gradient of missing-linker defects from the crystal surface to the interior, consistent with the spatial progression of PSE. Our success in incorporating bulky functional groups via PSE extends the scope of MOFs that can be used to host sizable, sophisticated guest species, including large catalysts or biomolecules, which were previously deemed only incorporable into MOFs of very large windows.
AB - In metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), organic linkers are subject to postsynthetic exchange (PSE) when new linkers reach sites of PSE by diffusion. Here, we show that during PSE, a bulky organic linker is able to penetrate narrow-window MOF crystals. The bulky linker migrates by continuously replacing the linkers gating the otherwise impassable windows and serially occupying an array of backbone sites, a mechanism we term through-backbone diffusion. A necessary consequence of this process is the accumulation of missing-linker defects along the diffusion trajectories. Using fluorescence intensity and lifetime imaging microscopy, we found a gradient of missing-linker defects from the crystal surface to the interior, consistent with the spatial progression of PSE. Our success in incorporating bulky functional groups via PSE extends the scope of MOFs that can be used to host sizable, sophisticated guest species, including large catalysts or biomolecules, which were previously deemed only incorporable into MOFs of very large windows.
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U2 - 10.1021/jacs.1c04804
DO - 10.1021/jacs.1c04804
M3 - Article
C2 - 34228932
AN - SCOPUS:85110991077
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 143
SP - 10541
EP - 10546
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 28
ER -