Influences of Deprotonation and Modulation on Nucleation and Growth of UiO-66: Intergrowth and Orientation

The most common products obtained in the synthesis of zirconium-based metal–organic frameworks (ZrMOFs) are fine powders. The particle size of a typical ZrMOF UiO-66 was first reported to be around 200 nm, so the original crystal structure was only solved by powder XRD coupled with Rietveld refineme...

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Published inJournal of physical chemistry. C Vol. 122; no. 4; pp. 2200 - 2206
Main Authors Shan, Bohan, James, Joshua B, Armstrong, Mitchell R, Close, Emily C, Letham, Portia A, Nikkhah, Kassandra, Lin, Y. S, Mu, Bin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Chemical Society 01.02.2018
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Summary:The most common products obtained in the synthesis of zirconium-based metal–organic frameworks (ZrMOFs) are fine powders. The particle size of a typical ZrMOF UiO-66 was first reported to be around 200 nm, so the original crystal structure was only solved by powder XRD coupled with Rietveld refinement due to the incapability of single crystal XRD to solve such small crystals with poor crystallinity. One may ask the reason why the particle size of UiO-66 is so small compared to that of other common MOFs and what the key factor terminating the growth of UiO-66 is. In this work, we try to answer this question by proposing a hypothesis that the partially deprotonated ligand caused by the accumulated protons in the reaction solution is the key factor preventing the continuous growth of the UiO-66 crystal. The hypothesis is verified by growth reactivation with the addition of a deprotonating agent in an in situ biphase solvothermal reaction. As long as the protons were sufficiently coordinated by the deprotonating agent, the continuous growth of UiO-66 is guaranteed. Moreover, the modulation effect can impact the coordination equilibrium and nucleation so that an oriented attachment growth of UiO-66 film was achieved in membrane structures.
ISSN:1932-7447
1932-7455
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b11012