9 research outputs found

    Structural diversity of metal-organic frameworks via employment of azamacrocycles as a building block

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    Research on incorporating macrocycles into metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) has been performed intensively due to the opportunities afforded by merging a merit of macrocycles with MOF chemistry, which lead to novel hybrid materials for potential application. Among the numerous kinds of macrocycles, azamacrocycles are used as traditional and popular chelating agents in supramolecular coordination chemistry, because they are very easily functionalized by joining pendant arms and possess a strong propensity to complex metal cations, accounting for the amine functionalities. With this as background, many types of azamacrocyclic MOFs have been synthesized, granting compositionally and topologically new MOFs. The macrocyclic rings can serve as additional adsorption sites or catalytic sites, and the pendant arms on the macrocycles can also play versatile roles such as structure-directing agents, pore-decorating moieties, or rotatable molecular gates for opening/closing pores. In this review, we comprehensively discuss the syntheses, structures, and features of azamacrocyclic MOFs reported to date. Based on representative studies, advantages of these compounds are described, such as how the azamacrocycles increase the structural diversity and complexity of the MOFs and induce novel structural properties within the architectures

    Fast motion of molecular rotors in metal–organic framework struts at very low temperatures

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    The solid state is typically not well suited to sustaining fast molecular motion, but in recent years a variety of molecular machines, switches and rotors have been successfully engineered within porous crystals and on surfaces. Here we show a fast-rotating molecular rotor within the bicyclopentane–dicarboxylate struts of a zinc-based metal–organic framework—the carboxylate groups anchored to the metal clusters act as an axle while the bicyclic unit is free to rotate. The three-fold bipyramidal symmetry of the rotator conflicts with the four-fold symmetry of the struts within the cubic crystal cell of the zinc metal–organic framework. This frustrates the formation of stable conformations, allowing for the continuous, unidirectional, hyperfast rotation of the bicyclic units with an energy barrier of 6.2 cal mol−1 and a high frequency persistent for several turns even at very low temperatures (1010 Hz below 2 K). Using zirconium instead of zinc led to a different metal cluster–carboxylate coordination arrangement in the resulting metal–organic framework, and much slower rotation of the bicyclic units

    Insights into the Gas Adsorption Mechanisms in Metal–Organic Frameworks from Classical Molecular Simulations

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