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      Electroactive Nanoporous Metal Oxides and Chalcogenides by Chemical Design

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          Abstract

          The archetypal silica- and aluminosilicate-based zeolite-type materials are renowned for wide-ranging applications in heterogeneous catalysis, gas-separation and ion-exchange. Their compositional space can be expanded to include nanoporous metal chalcogenides, exemplified by germanium and tin sulfides and selenides. By comparison with the properties of bulk metal dichalcogenides and their 2D derivatives, these open-framework analogues may be viewed as three-dimensional semiconductors filled with nanometer voids. Applications exist in a range of molecule size and shape discriminating devices. However, what is the electronic structure of nanoporous metal chalcogenides? Herein, materials modeling is used to describe the properties of a homologous series of nanoporous metal chalcogenides denoted np-MX 2, where M = Si, Ge, Sn, Pb, and X = O, S, Se, Te, with Sodalite, LTA and aluminum chromium phosphate-1 structure types. Depending on the choice of metal and anion their properties can be tuned from insulators to semiconductors to metals with additional modification achieved through doping, solid solutions, and inclusion (with fullerene, quantum dots, and hole transport materials). These systems form the basis of a new branch of semiconductor nanochemistry in three dimensions.

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          Die Konstitution der Mischkristalle und die Raumf�llung der Atome

          L. Vegard (1921)
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            Tunable electrical conductivity in metal-organic framework thin-film devices.

            We report a strategy for realizing tunable electrical conductivity in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) in which the nanopores are infiltrated with redox-active, conjugated guest molecules. This approach is demonstrated using thin-film devices of the MOF Cu3(BTC)2 (also known as HKUST-1; BTC, benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxylic acid) infiltrated with the molecule 7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinododimethane (TCNQ). Tunable, air-stable electrical conductivity over six orders of magnitude is achieved, with values as high as 7 siemens per meter. Spectroscopic data and first-principles modeling suggest that the conductivity arises from TCNQ guest molecules bridging the binuclear copper paddlewheels in the framework, leading to strong electronic coupling between the dimeric Cu subunits. These ohmically conducting porous MOFs could have applications in conformal electronic devices, reconfigurable electronics, and sensors.
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              Cooperative insertion of CO2 in diamine-appended metal-organic frameworks.

              The process of carbon capture and sequestration has been proposed as a method of mitigating the build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. If implemented, the cost of electricity generated by a fossil fuel-burning power plant would rise substantially, owing to the expense of removing CO2 from the effluent stream. There is therefore an urgent need for more efficient gas separation technologies, such as those potentially offered by advanced solid adsorbents. Here we show that diamine-appended metal-organic frameworks can behave as 'phase-change' adsorbents, with unusual step-shaped CO2 adsorption isotherms that shift markedly with temperature. Results from spectroscopic, diffraction and computational studies show that the origin of the sharp adsorption step is an unprecedented cooperative process in which, above a metal-dependent threshold pressure, CO2 molecules insert into metal-amine bonds, inducing a reorganization of the amines into well-ordered chains of ammonium carbamate. As a consequence, large CO2 separation capacities can be achieved with small temperature swings, and regeneration energies appreciably lower than achievable with state-of-the-art aqueous amine solutions become feasible. The results provide a mechanistic framework for designing highly efficient adsorbents for removing CO2 from various gas mixtures, and yield insights into the conservation of Mg(2+) within the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase family of enzymes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Chem Mater
                Chem Mater
                cm
                cmatex
                Chemistry of Materials
                American Chemical Society
                0897-4756
                1520-5002
                27 March 2017
                25 April 2017
                : 29
                : 8
                : 3663-3670
                Affiliations
                []Department of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States
                []Department of Chemistry, University of Bath , Claverton Down, Bath, BA2 7AY, United Kingdom
                [§ ]Kathleen Lonsdale Materials Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University College London , 20 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0AJ, United Kingdom
                []Diamond Light Source Ltd., Diamond House, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus , Didcot, Oxfordshire OX11 0DE, United Kingdom
                []Department of Chemistry, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario M5S 3H6, Canada
                [# ]Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Yonsei University , Seoul 03722, South Korea
                []Department of Materials, Imperial College London , Exhibition Road, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b00464
                5445719
                fe14e9d9-2569-4bb1-a253-35a2a766177f
                Copyright © 2017 American Chemical Society

                This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.

                History
                : 06 February 2017
                : 27 March 2017
                Categories
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                Custom metadata
                cm7b00464
                cm-2017-00464y

                Materials science
                Materials science

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