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  4. Understanding How Ligand Functionalization Influences CO2 and N-2 Adsorption in a Sodalite Metal-Organic Framework
 
research article

Understanding How Ligand Functionalization Influences CO2 and N-2 Adsorption in a Sodalite Metal-Organic Framework

Asgari, Mehrdad  
•
Semino, Rocio  
•
Schouwink, Pascal A.  
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February 25, 2020
Chemistry Of Materials

In this work, a detailed study is conducted to understand how ligand substitution influences the CO, and N-2 adsorption properties of two highly crystalline sodalite metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) known as Cu-BTT (BTT-3 = 1,3,5-benzenetristetrazolate) and Cu-BTTri (BTTri(-3) = 1,3,5-benzenetristriazolate). The enthalpy of adsorption and observed adsorption capacities at a given pressure are significantly lower for Cu-BTTri compared to its tetrazole counterpart, Cu-BTT. In situ X-ray and neutron diffraction, which allow visualization of the CO2 and N-2 binding sites on the internal surface of Cu-BTTri, provide insights into understanding the subtle differences. As expected, slightly elongated distances between the open Cu2+ sites and surface-bound CO, in Cu-BTTri can be explained by the fact that the triazolate ligand is a better electron donor than the tetrazolate. The more pronounced Jahn-Teller effect in Cu-BTTri leads to weaker guest binding. The results of the aforementioned structural analysis were complemented by the prediction of the binding energies at each CO2 and N-2 adsorption site by density functional theory calculations. In addition, variable temperature in situ diffraction measurements shed light on the fine structural changes of the framework and CO2 occupancies at different adsorption sites as a function of temperature. Finally, simulated breakthrough curves obtained for both sodalite MOFs demonstrate the materials' potential performance in dry postcombustion CO2 capture. The simulation, which considers both framework uptake capacity and selectivity, predicts better separation performance for Cu-BTT. The information obtained in this work highlights how ligand substitution can influence adsorption properties and hence provides further insights into the material optimization for important separations.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b04631
Web of Science ID

WOS:000517351300019

Author(s)
Asgari, Mehrdad  
Semino, Rocio  
Schouwink, Pascal A.  
Kochetygov, Ilia  
Tarver, Jacob
Trukhina, Olga  
Krishna, Rajamani
Brown, Craig M.
Ceriotti, Michele  
Queen, Wendy L.  
Date Issued

2020-02-25

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC

Published in
Chemistry Of Materials
Volume

32

Issue

4

Start page

1526

End page

1536

Subjects

Chemistry, Physical

•

Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

•

Chemistry

•

Materials Science

•

negative thermal-expansion

•

carbon-dioxide

•

neutron-diffraction

•

solid sorbents

•

capture

•

binding

•

pseudopotentials

•

cu

•

methodologies

•

dft

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
COSMO  
LFIM  
Available on Infoscience
March 19, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/167427
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