HKUST-1 is a metal–organic framework (MOF) which plays a significant role in both applicative and basic fields of research, thanks to its outstanding properties of adsorption and catalysis but also because it is a reference material for the study of many general properties of MOFs. Its metallic group comprises a pair of Cu2+ ions chelated by four carboxylate bridges, forming a structure known as paddle-wheel unit, which is the heart of the material. However, previous studies have well established that the paddle-wheel is incline to hydrolysis. In fact, the prolonged exposure of the material to moisture promotes the hydrolysis of Cu–O bonds in the paddle-wheels, so breaking the crystalline network. The main objective of the present experimental investigation is the determination of the details of the structural defects induced by this process in the crystal, and it has been successfully pursued by coupling the electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy with other more commonly considered techniques, such as X-ray diffraction, surface area estimation, and scanning electron microscopy. Thanks to this original approach we have recognized three stages of the process of decomposition of HKUST-1, and we have unveiled the details of the corresponding equilibrium structures of the paddle-wheels at the atomic scale level
We report an experimental investigation by Raman spectroscopy of the decomposition process of Metal-Organic Framework (MOF) HKUST-1 upon exposure to air moisture (T=300 K, 70% relative humidity). The data collected here are compared with the indications obtained from a model of the process of decomposition of this material proposed in literature. In agreement with that model, the reported Raman measurements indicate that for exposure times longer than 20 days relevant irreversible processes take place, which are related to the occurrence of the hydrolysis of Cu-O bonds. These processes induce small but detectable variations of the peak positions and intensities of the main Raman bands of the material, which can be related to Cu-Cu, Cu-O, and O-C-O stretching modes. The critical analyses of these changes have permitted us to obtain a more detailed description of the process of decomposition taking place in HKUST-1 upon interaction with moisture. Furthermore, the reported Raman data give further strong support to the recently proposed model of decomposition of HKUST-1, contributing significantly to the development of a complete picture of the properties of this considerable deleterious effect.
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