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      Heterometallic Metal-Organic Frameworks of MOF-5 and UiO-66 Families: Insight from Computational Chemistry

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          Abstract

          We study the energetic stability and structural features of bimetallic metal-organic frameworks. Such heterometallic MOFs, which can result from partial substitutions between two types of cations, can have specific physical or chemical properties used for example in catalysis or gas adsorption. We work here to provide through computational chemistry a microscopic understanding of bimetallic MOFs and the distribution of cations within their structure. We develop a methodology based on a systematic study of possible cation distributions at all cation ratios by means of quantum chemistry calculations at the density functional theory level. We analyze the energies of the resulting bimetallic frameworks and correlate them with various disorder descriptors (functions of the bimetallic framework topology, regardless of exact atomic positions). We apply our methodology to two families of MOFs known for heterometallicity: MOF-5 (with divalent metal ions) and UiO-66 (with tetravalent metal ions). We observe that bimetallicity is overall more favorable for pairs of cations with sizes very close to each other, owing to a charge transfer mechanism inside secondary building units. For cation pairs with significant mutual size difference, metal mixing is globally less favorable, and the energy signifantly correlates with the coordination environment of linkers, determining their ability to adapt the mixing-induced strains. This effect is particularly strong in the UiO-66 family because of high cluster coordination number.

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          Most cited references13

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          Design and synthesis of an exceptionally stable and highly porous metal-organic framework

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            Mapping of functional groups in metal-organic frameworks.

            We determined the heterogeneous mesoscale spatial apportionment of functional groups in a series of multivariate metal-organic frameworks (MTV-MOF-5) containing BDC (1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) linkers with different functional groups--B (BDC-NH2), E (BDC-NO2), F [(BDC-(CH3)2], H [BDC-(OC3H5)2], and I [BDC-(OC7H7)2]--using solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance measurements combined with molecular simulations. Our analysis reveals that these methods discern between random (EF), alternating (EI and EHI), and various cluster (BF) forms of functional group apportionments. This combined synthetic, characterization, and computational approach predicts the adsorptive properties of crystalline MTV-MOF systems. This methodology, developed in the context of ordered frameworks, is a first step in resolving the more general problem of spatial disorder in other ordered materials, including mesoporous materials, functionalized polymers, and defect distributions within crystalline solids.
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              Hartree-Fock study of phase changes in ZnO at high pressure

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                19 April 2019
                Article
                10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b08594
                1904.09138
                00c8e61d-9f36-4f32-9639-1384d9906d1a

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                J. Phys. Chem. C, 2016, 120 (43), 24885-24894
                cond-mat.mtrl-sci

                Condensed matter
                Condensed matter

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