6 research outputs found

    Trivalent Zirconium and Hafnium Metal–Organic Frameworks for Catalytic 1,4-Dearomative Additions of Pyridines and Quinolines

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    We report the quantitative conversion of [M<sup>IV</sup><sub>6</sub>(μ<sub>3</sub>-O)<sub>4</sub>(μ<sub>3</sub>-OH)<sub>4</sub>Cl<sub>12</sub>]<sup>6–</sup> nodes in the MCl<sub>2</sub>-BTC metal–organic framework into the [M<sup>III</sup><sub>6</sub>(μ<sub>3</sub>-O)<sub>4</sub>(μ<sub>3</sub>-ONa)<sub>4</sub>H<sub>6</sub>]<sup>6–</sup> nodes in M<sup>III</sup>H-BTC (M = Zr, Hf; BTC is 1,3,5-benzenetricarboxylate) via bimetallic reductive elimination of H<sub>2</sub> from putative [M<sup>IV</sup><sub>6</sub>(μ<sub>3</sub>-O)<sub>4</sub>(μ<sub>3</sub>-OH)<sub>4</sub>H<sub>12</sub>]<sup>6–</sup> nodes. The coordinatively unsaturated M<sup>III</sup>H centers in M<sup>III</sup>H-BTC are highly active and selective for 1,4-dearomative hydroboration and hydrosilylation of pyridines and quinolines. This work demonstrated the potential of secondary building unit transformation in generating electronically unique and homogeneously inaccessible single-site solid catalysts for organic synthesis

    Nanoscale Metal–Organic Framework Overcomes Hypoxia for Photodynamic Therapy Primed Cancer Immunotherapy

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    Immunotherapy has become a promising cancer therapy, but only works for a subset of cancer patients. Immunogenic photodynamic therapy (PDT) can prime cancer immunotherapy to increase the response rates, but its efficacy is severely limited by tumor hypoxia. Here we report a nanoscale metal–organic framework, Fe-TBP, as a novel nanophotosensitizer to overcome tumor hypoxia and sensitize effective PDT, priming non-inflamed tumors for cancer immunotherapy. Fe-TBP was built from iron-oxo clusters and porphyrin ligands and sensitized PDT under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Fe-TBP mediated PDT significantly improved the efficacy of anti-programmed death-ligand 1 (α-PD-L1) treatment and elicited abscopal effects in a mouse model of colorectal cancer, resulting in >90% regression of tumors. Mechanistic studies revealed that Fe-TBP mediated PDT induced significant tumor infiltration of cytotoxic T cells

    Electron Injection from Photoexcited Metal–Organic Framework Ligands to Ru<sub>2</sub> Secondary Building Units for Visible-Light-Driven Hydrogen Evolution

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    We report the design of two new metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), Ru-TBP and Ru-TBP-Zn, based on Ru<sub>2</sub> secondary building units (SBUs) and porphyrin-derived tetracarboxylate ligands. The proximity of Ru<sub>2</sub> SBUs to porphyrin ligands (∼1.1 nm) facilitates multielectron transfer from excited porphyrins to Ru<sub>2</sub> SBUs to enable efficient visible-light-driven hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) in neutral water. Photophysical and electrochemical studies revealed oxidative quenching of excited porphyrin by Ru<sub>2</sub> SBUs as the initial step of the HER process and the energetics of key intermediates in the catalytic cycle. Our work provides a new strategy to building multifunctional MOFs with synergistic ligands and SBUs for efficient photocatalysis

    Electron Injection from Photoexcited Metal–Organic Framework Ligands to Ru<sub>2</sub> Secondary Building Units for Visible-Light-Driven Hydrogen Evolution

    No full text
    We report the design of two new metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), Ru-TBP and Ru-TBP-Zn, based on Ru<sub>2</sub> secondary building units (SBUs) and porphyrin-derived tetracarboxylate ligands. The proximity of Ru<sub>2</sub> SBUs to porphyrin ligands (∼1.1 nm) facilitates multielectron transfer from excited porphyrins to Ru<sub>2</sub> SBUs to enable efficient visible-light-driven hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) in neutral water. Photophysical and electrochemical studies revealed oxidative quenching of excited porphyrin by Ru<sub>2</sub> SBUs as the initial step of the HER process and the energetics of key intermediates in the catalytic cycle. Our work provides a new strategy to building multifunctional MOFs with synergistic ligands and SBUs for efficient photocatalysis

    Titanium(III)-Oxo Clusters in a Metal–Organic Framework Support Single-Site Co(II)-Hydride Catalysts for Arene Hydrogenation

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    Titania (TiO<sub>2</sub>) is widely used in the chemical industry as an efficacious catalyst support, benefiting from its unique strong metal–support interaction. Many proposals have been made to rationalize this effect at the macroscopic level, yet the underlying molecular mechanism is not understood due to the presence of multiple catalytic species on the TiO<sub>2</sub> surface. This challenge can be addressed with metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) featuring well-defined metal oxo/hydroxo clusters for supporting single-site catalysts. Herein we report that the Ti<sub>8</sub>(μ<sub>2</sub>-O)<sub>8</sub>(μ<sub>2</sub>-OH)<sub>4</sub> node of the Ti-BDC MOF (MIL-125) provides a single-site model of the classical TiO<sub>2</sub> support to enable Co<sup>II</sup>-hydride-catalyzed arene hydrogenation. The catalytic activity of the supported Co<sup>II</sup>-hydride is strongly dependent on the reduction of the Ti-oxo cluster, definitively proving the pivotal role of Ti<sup>III</sup> in the performance of the supported catalyst. This work thus provides a molecularly precise model of Ti-oxo clusters for understating the strong metal–support interaction of TiO<sub>2</sub>-supported heterogeneous catalysts

    Successful Coupling of a Bis-Amidoxime Uranophile with a Hydrophilic Backbone for Selective Uranium Sequestration

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    The amidoxime group (−RNH<sub>2</sub>NOH) has long been used to extract uranium from seawater on account of its high affinity toward uranium. The development of tunable sorbent materials for uranium sequestration remains a research priority as well as a significant challenge. Herein, we report the design, synthesis, and uranium sorption properties of bis-amidoxime-functionalized polymeric materials (BAP <b>1</b>–<b>3</b>). Bifunctional amidoxime monomers were copolymerized with an acrylamide cross-linker to obtain bis-amidoxime incorporation as high as 2 mmol g<sup>–1</sup> after five synthetic steps. The resulting sorbents were able to uptake nearly 600 mg of uranium per gram of polymer after 37 days of contact with a seawater simulant containing 8 ppm uranium. Moreover, the polymeric materials exhibited low vanadium uptake with a maximum capacity of 128 mg of vanadium per gram of polymer. This computationally predicted and experimentally realized selectivity of uranium over vanadium, nearly 5 to 1 w/w, is one of the highest reported to date and represents an advancement in the rational design of sorbent materials with high uptake capacity and selectivity
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