31 research outputs found
Rapid Cycling and Exceptional Yield in a Metal-Organic Framework Water Harvester.
Sorbent-assisted water harvesting from air represents an attractive way to address water scarcity in arid climates. Hitherto, sorbents developed for this technology have exclusively been designed to perform one water harvesting cycle (WHC) per day, but the productivities attained with this approach cannot reasonably meet the rising demand for drinking water. This work shows that a microporous aluminum-based metal-organic framework, MOF-303, can perform an adsorption-desorption cycle within minutes under a mild temperature swing, which opens the way for high-productivity water harvesting through rapid, continuous WHCs. Additionally, the favorable dynamic water sorption properties of MOF-303 allow it to outperform other commercial sorbents displaying excellent steady-state characteristics under similar experimental conditions. Finally, these findings are implemented in a new water harvester capable of generating 1.3 L kgMOF -1 day-1 in an indoor arid environment (32% relative humidity, 27 °C) and 0.7 L kgMOF -1 day-1 in the Mojave Desert (in conditions as extreme as 10% RH, 27 °C), representing an improvement by 1 order of magnitude over previously reported devices. This study demonstrates that creating sorbents capable of rapid water sorption dynamics, rather than merely focusing on high water capacities, is crucial to reach water production on a scale matching human consumption
Adsorption-based atmospheric water harvesting device for arid climates
Water scarcity is a particularly severe challenge in arid and desert climates. While a substantial amount of water is present in the form of vapour in the atmosphere, harvesting this water by state-of-the-art dewing technology can be extremely energy intensive and impractical, particularly when the relative humidity (RH) is low (i.e., below ~40% RH). In contrast, atmospheric water generators that utilise sorbents enable capture of vapour at low RH conditions and can be driven by the abundant source of solar-thermal energy with higher efficiency. Here, we demonstrate an air-cooled sorbent-based atmospheric water harvesting device using the metal-organic framework (MOF)-801 [Zr 6 O 4 (OH) 4 (fumarate) 6 ] operating in an exceptionally arid climate (10-40% RH) and sub-zero dew points (Tempe, Arizona, USA) with a thermal efficiency (solar input to water conversion) of ~14%. We predict that this device delivered over 0.25 L of water per kg of MOF for a single daily cycle
Database resources of the National Center for Biotechnology Information
In addition to maintaining the GenBank® nucleic acid sequence database, the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) provides analysis and retrieval resources for the data in GenBank and other biological data made available through the NCBI web site. NCBI resources include Entrez, the Entrez Programming Utilities, MyNCBI, PubMed, PubMed Central, Entrez Gene, the NCBI Taxonomy Browser, BLAST, BLAST Link (BLink), Electronic PCR, OrfFinder, Spidey, Splign, Reference Sequence, UniGene, HomoloGene, ProtEST, dbMHC, dbSNP, Cancer Chromosomes, Entrez Genomes and related tools, the Map Viewer, Model Maker, Evidence Viewer, Trace Archive, Sequence Read Archive, Retroviral Genotyping Tools, HIV-1/Human Protein Interaction Database, Gene Expression Omnibus, Entrez Probe, GENSAT, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Animals, the Molecular Modeling Database, the Conserved Domain Database, the Conserved Domain Architecture Retrieval Tool, Biosystems, Peptidome, Protein Clusters and the PubChem suite of small molecule databases. Augmenting many of the web applications are custom implementations of the BLAST program optimized to search specialized data sets. All these resources can be accessed through the NCBI home page at www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Molecular Retrofitting Adapts a Metal-Organic Framework to Extreme Pressure.
Despite numerous studies on chemical and thermal stability of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), mechanical stability remains largely undeveloped. To date, no strategy exists to control the mechanical deformation of MOFs under ultrahigh pressure. Here, we show that the mechanically unstable MOF-520 can be retrofitted by precise placement of a rigid 4,4'-biphenyldicarboxylate (BPDC) linker as a "girder" to afford a mechanically robust framework: MOF-520-BPDC. This retrofitting alters how the structure deforms under ultrahigh pressure and thus leads to a drastic enhancement of its mechanical robustness. While in the parent MOF-520 the pressure transmitting medium molecules diffuse into the pore and expand the structure from the inside upon compression, the girder in the new retrofitted MOF-520-BPDC prevents the framework from expansion by linking two adjacent secondary building units together. As a result, the modified MOF is stable under hydrostatic compression in a diamond-anvil cell up to 5.5 gigapascal. The increased mechanical stability of MOF-520-BPDC prohibits the typical amorphization observed for MOFs in this pressure range. Direct correlation between the orientation of these girders within the framework and its linear strain was estimated, providing new insights for the design of MOFs with optimized mechanical properties
Coordinative Alignment in the Pores of MOFs for the Structural Determination of N-, S-, and P-Containing Organic Compounds Including Complex Chiral Molecules
Coordinative alignment of target small molecules onto a chiral metal–organic framework (MOF-520)provides a powerful method to determine the structures of small molecules through single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SXRD). In this work, the structures of 17 molecules with eight new coordinating functionalities and varying size have been determined by this method, four of which are complex molecules being crystallized for the first time. The chirality of the MOF backbone not only enables enantioselective crystallization of chiral small molecules from a racemic mixture but also imposes diastereoselective incorporation upon achiral molecules. Crystallographic studies assisted by density functional theory (DFT) calculations indicate that the stereoselectivity of MOF-520 not exclusively comes from the steric confinement of the chiral pore environment but also from asymmetric chemical bonding of the target molecules with the framework that is able to provide sufficient energy difference between possible coordination configurations
Molecular Retrofitting Adapts a Metal–Organic Framework to Extreme Pressure
Despite numerous
studies on chemical and thermal stability of metal–organic
frameworks (MOFs), mechanical stability remains largely undeveloped.
To date, no strategy exists to control the mechanical deformation
of MOFs under ultrahigh pressure. Here, we show that the mechanically
unstable MOF-520 can be retrofitted by precise placement of a rigid
4,4′-biphenyldicarboxylate (BPDC) linker as a “girder”
to afford a mechanically robust framework: MOF-520-BPDC. This retrofitting
alters how the structure deforms under ultrahigh pressure and thus
leads to a drastic enhancement of its mechanical robustness. While
in the parent MOF-520 the pressure transmitting medium molecules diffuse
into the pore and expand the structure from the inside upon compression,
the girder in the new retrofitted MOF-520-BPDC prevents the framework
from expansion by linking two adjacent secondary building units together.
As a result, the modified MOF is stable under hydrostatic compression
in a diamond-anvil cell up to 5.5 gigapascal. The increased mechanical
stability of MOF-520-BPDC prohibits the typical amorphization observed
for MOFs in this pressure range. Direct correlation between the orientation
of these girders within the framework and its linear strain was estimated,
providing new insights for the design of MOFs with optimized mechanical
properties
Molecular Retrofitting Adapts a Metal–Organic Framework to Extreme Pressure
Despite numerous
studies on chemical and thermal stability of metal–organic
frameworks (MOFs), mechanical stability remains largely undeveloped.
To date, no strategy exists to control the mechanical deformation
of MOFs under ultrahigh pressure. Here, we show that the mechanically
unstable MOF-520 can be retrofitted by precise placement of a rigid
4,4′-biphenyldicarboxylate (BPDC) linker as a “girder”
to afford a mechanically robust framework: MOF-520-BPDC. This retrofitting
alters how the structure deforms under ultrahigh pressure and thus
leads to a drastic enhancement of its mechanical robustness. While
in the parent MOF-520 the pressure transmitting medium molecules diffuse
into the pore and expand the structure from the inside upon compression,
the girder in the new retrofitted MOF-520-BPDC prevents the framework
from expansion by linking two adjacent secondary building units together.
As a result, the modified MOF is stable under hydrostatic compression
in a diamond-anvil cell up to 5.5 gigapascal. The increased mechanical
stability of MOF-520-BPDC prohibits the typical amorphization observed
for MOFs in this pressure range. Direct correlation between the orientation
of these girders within the framework and its linear strain was estimated,
providing new insights for the design of MOFs with optimized mechanical
properties
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Architectural Stabilization of a Gold(III) Catalyst in Metal-Organic Frameworks.
Unimolecular decomposition pathways are challenging to address in transition-metal catalysis and have previously not been suppressed via incorporation into a solid support. Two robust metal-organic frameworks (IRMOF-10 and bio-MOF-100) are used for the architectural stabilization of a structurally well-defined gold(III) catalyst. The inherent rigidity of these materials is utilized to preclude a unimolecular decomposition pathway - reductive elimination. Through this architectural stabilization strategy, decomposition of the incorporated gold(III) catalyst in the metal-organic frameworks is not observed; in contrast, the homogeneous analogue is prone to decomposition in solution. Stabilization of the catalyst in these metal-organic frameworks precludes leaching and enables recyclability, which is crucial for productive heterogeneous catalysis