Fabrication of Porous Cubic Architecture of ZnO Using
Zn-terephthalate MOFs with Characteristic Microstructures
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Abstract
A method for synthesizing porous
cubic-shaped ZnO particles a few tens of micrometers in size is described
on the basis of a pyrolytic conversion of Zn-terephthalate metal–organic
frameworks (MOFs). MOF crystals were initially grown in solutions
containing Zn(NO<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>·6H<sub>2</sub>O and
terephthalic acid as solutes and N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) or N,N-diethylformamide
(DEF) as a solvent under a solvothermal condition. It was the key
to controlling the microstructure of MOF cuboids for their use as
an intermediate compound for ZnO. Actually, many cracks were formed
and hence the cubic microstructure was somewhat destroyed in the pyrolytic
conversion from dense MOF crystals (grown in the DMF solution) to
ZnO. In contrast, mesocrystal-like MOF cuboids (grown in the DEF solution)
could maintain their shape during the pyrolysis because of the relaxation
against a MOF-to-ZnO volume change. The resultant ZnO with a highly
porous cubic structure showed intense visible photoluminescence upon
irradiation with ultraviolet light