Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a family of chemically diverse materials, with applications in a wide range of fields, covering engineering, physics, chemistry, biology and medicine. Until recently, research has focused almost entirely on crystalline structures, yet now a clear trend is emerging, shifting the emphasis onto disordered states, including 'defective by design' crystals, as well as amorphous phases such as glasses and gels. Here we introduce a strongly associated MOF liquid, obtained by melting a zeolitic imidazolate framework. We combine in situ variable temperature X-ray, ex situ neutron pair distribution function experiments, and first-principles molecular dynamics simulations to study the melting phenomenon and the nature of the liquid obtained. We demonstrate from structural, dynamical, and thermodynamical information that the chemical configuration, coordinative bonding, and porosity of the parent crystalline framework survive upon formation of the MOF liquid.
We report on the implementation of a tool for the analysis of second-order elastic stiffness tensors, provided with both an open-source Python module and a standalone online application allowing the visualization of anisotropic mechanical properties. After describing the software features, how we compute the conventional elastic constants and how we represent them graphically, we explain our technical choices for the implementation. In particular, we focus on why a Python module is used to generate the HTML web page with embedded Javascript for dynamical plots.
Well-equilibrated molecular-packing models have been produced for 10 different polyimides. The Gusev-Suter transition-state theory was used to calculate gas solubilities and diffusion coefficients for nitrogen, oxygen, methane, and carbon dioxide. Good agreement with experiment (factors 1-4) was found, except for CO 2. The difficulties in this comparison were discussed. A significant improvement from former results could be assessed for the predicted O2/N2 selectivity values. The simulated models allow an accurate determination of structural parameters, either as a single parameter, like the fractional free volume, or as size-distribution function of free-volume elements accessible for a certain penetrant. The 2,2′-bis(3,4-dicarboxy-phenyl) hexafluoropropane polyimides with the highest oxygen permeability (50-130 Barrer) show a wider size distribution with an additional peak or shoulder at larger radii (>5-6 Å) than conventional polyimides. A constitutive structural element seems to be the o-methyl groups in the aromatic diamine moiety.
Metal-organic frameworks are chemically versatile materials, and excellent candidates for many applications from carbon capture to drug delivery, through hydrogen storage. While most studies so far focus on the crystalline MOFs, there has been a recent shift to the study of their disordered states, such as defective structures, glasses, gels, and very recently liquid MOFs. Following the publication of the melting mechanism of zeolitic imidazolate framework ZIF-4, we use here molecular simulation in order to investigate the similarities and differences with two other zeolitic imidazolate frameworks, ZIF-8 and ZIF-zni. We perform first principles molecular dynamics simulations to study the melting phenomena and the nature of the liquids obtained, focusing on structural characterization at the molecular scale, dynamics of the species, and thermodynamics of the solid-liquid transition. We show how the retention of chemical configuration, the changes in the coordination network, and the variation of the porous volume in the liquid phase are influenced by the parent crystalline framework.
We report an ab initio molecular dynamics study of the hydration process in a model IRMOF material. At low water content (one molecule per unit cell), water physisorption is observed on the zinc cation but the free⇄bound equilibrium strongly favors the free state. This is consistent with the hydrophobic nature of the host matrix and its type-V isotherm observed in a classical Monte Carlo simulation. At higher loading, a water cluster can be formed at the Zn(4)O site and this is shown to stabilize the water-bound state. This structure rapidly transforms into a linker-displaced state, where water has fully displaced one arm of a linker and which corresponds to the loss of the material's fully ordered structure. Thus an overall hydrophobic MOF material can also become water unstable, a feature that has not been fully understood until now.
Ga2 reacts spontaneously with H2 in solid Ar matrixes at 12 K to form the cyclic molecule Ga(mu-H)2Ga. In2 does not react with H2 under similar conditions, but irradiation at wavelengths near 365 nm induces the formation of the corresponding indium hydride, In(mu-H)2In. The molecules have been identified and characterized by the IR spectra displayed by matrixes containing the metal and H2, D2, HD, or H2 + D2; they each have planar, dihydrido-bridged structures with D2h symmetry, as endorsed by comparison of the measured spectra (i) with the properties forecast by quantum chemical calculations and (ii) with the spectra of known gallium and indium hydrides. Both are photolabile under visible light (lambda > 450 nm): green light (lambda = ca. 546 nm) causes Ga(mu-H)2Ga to isomerize to a mixture of HGaGaH and H2GaGa, whereas broad-band visible irradiation (lambda > 450 nm) of In(mu-H)2In gives rise to the isomer HInInH, together with InH. The isomerization can be reversed by UV photolysis (lambda = ca. 365 nm) of HGaGaH, H2GaGa, and HInInH or by near-IR photolysis (lambda > 700 nm) of HGaGaH and H2GaGa.
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