2 research outputs found
Multifunctional Luminescent and Proton-Conducting Lanthanide Carboxyphosphonate Open-Framework Hybrids Exhibiting Crystalline-to-Amorphous-to-Crystalline Transformations
The chemistry of metal phosphonates has been progressing
fast with
the addition of new materials that possess novel structural features
and new properties, occasionally in a cooperative manner. In this
paper, we report a new family of functional lanthanide-carboxyphosphonate
materials. Specifically, the lanthanide is La, Ce, Pr, Sm, Eu, Gd,
Tb, or Dy and the carboxyphosphonate ligand is 2-hydroxyphosphonoacetic
acid (H<sub>3</sub>HPA). All reported LnHPA compounds, Ln<sub>3</sub>(H<sub>0.75</sub>O<sub>3</sub>PCHOHCOO)<sub>4</sub>·<i>x</i>H<sub>2</sub>O (<i>x</i> = 15â16), crystallize
in the orthorhombic system. Two types of structures were isolated:
series I and II polymorphs. For both series, the three-dimensional
(3D) open frameworks result from the linkage of similar organo-inorganic
layers, in the <i>ac</i>-plane, by central lanthanide cations,
which yield trimeric units also found in other metal-HPA hybrids.
Large oval-shaped 1D channels are formed by the spatial separation
of the layers along the <i>b</i>-axis and filled with lattice
water molecules. LnHPA materials undergo remarkable crystalline-to-amorphous-to
crystalline transformations upon dehydration and rehydration cycles,
as confirmed by thermodiffraction and NMR spectroscopy. The highest
proton conductivity was observed for GdHPA (series II), 3.2 Ă
10<sup>â4</sup> S cm<sup>â1</sup> at 98% RH and <i>T</i> = 21 °C. The dehydrationârehydration chemistry
was also followed by photoluminescence spectroscopy. It was shown
that loss and reuptake of water molecules are accompanied by clear
changes in the photoluminescence spectra and lifetimes of the Eu analog
(series II). Our present results reveal a wide family of well-characterized,
multifunctional lanthanide-based phosphonate 3D-structured metalâorganic
frameworks (MOFs) that show reversible crystalline-to-amorphous-to-crystalline
transformations and, at the same time, exhibit high proton conductivity
Multifunctional Luminescent and Proton-Conducting Lanthanide Carboxyphosphonate Open-Framework Hybrids Exhibiting Crystalline-to-Amorphous-to-Crystalline Transformations
The chemistry of metal phosphonates has been progressing
fast with
the addition of new materials that possess novel structural features
and new properties, occasionally in a cooperative manner. In this
paper, we report a new family of functional lanthanide-carboxyphosphonate
materials. Specifically, the lanthanide is La, Ce, Pr, Sm, Eu, Gd,
Tb, or Dy and the carboxyphosphonate ligand is 2-hydroxyphosphonoacetic
acid (H<sub>3</sub>HPA). All reported LnHPA compounds, Ln<sub>3</sub>(H<sub>0.75</sub>O<sub>3</sub>PCHOHCOO)<sub>4</sub>·<i>x</i>H<sub>2</sub>O (<i>x</i> = 15â16), crystallize
in the orthorhombic system. Two types of structures were isolated:
series I and II polymorphs. For both series, the three-dimensional
(3D) open frameworks result from the linkage of similar organo-inorganic
layers, in the <i>ac</i>-plane, by central lanthanide cations,
which yield trimeric units also found in other metal-HPA hybrids.
Large oval-shaped 1D channels are formed by the spatial separation
of the layers along the <i>b</i>-axis and filled with lattice
water molecules. LnHPA materials undergo remarkable crystalline-to-amorphous-to
crystalline transformations upon dehydration and rehydration cycles,
as confirmed by thermodiffraction and NMR spectroscopy. The highest
proton conductivity was observed for GdHPA (series II), 3.2 Ă
10<sup>â4</sup> S cm<sup>â1</sup> at 98% RH and <i>T</i> = 21 °C. The dehydrationârehydration chemistry
was also followed by photoluminescence spectroscopy. It was shown
that loss and reuptake of water molecules are accompanied by clear
changes in the photoluminescence spectra and lifetimes of the Eu analog
(series II). Our present results reveal a wide family of well-characterized,
multifunctional lanthanide-based phosphonate 3D-structured metalâorganic
frameworks (MOFs) that show reversible crystalline-to-amorphous-to-crystalline
transformations and, at the same time, exhibit high proton conductivity