Based on a V-shaped In(III) metal–organic framework (MOF): Design, synthesis and characterization of diverse physical and chemical properties

Polyhedron ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 134 ◽  
pp. 207-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Zhang ◽  
Li-Xian Sun ◽  
Jian Song ◽  
Ning Du ◽  
Yong-Heng Xing ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Sukhendu Mandal ◽  
Asha P. ◽  
R. K. Aparna ◽  
Balu P Ratheesh ◽  
Manju M Maman

Engineering defective UiO-66 with functionalized modulator may create functionality with promising physical and chemical properties. Herein, we use 2-mercaptobenzoic acid (2-MBA) as a modulator for the functionalization of defective UiO-66...


Nanoscale ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xianyu Chu ◽  
Fanling Meng ◽  
Ting Deng ◽  
Wei Zhang

Designing and synthesizing new materials with special physical and chemical properties are the key steps to assembling high performance supercapacitors. Metal organic framework (MOF) derived porous carbon material has drawn...


2014 ◽  
Vol 70 (a1) ◽  
pp. C1223-C1223
Author(s):  
Jason Benedict ◽  
Ian Walton ◽  
Dan Patel ◽  
Jordan Cox

Metal-organic Frameworks (MOFs) remain an extremely active area of research given the wide variety of potential applications and the enormous diversity of structures that can be created from their constituent building blocks. While MOFs are typically employed as passive materials, next-generation materials will exhibit structural and/or electronic changes in response to applied external stimuli including light, charge, and pH. Herein we present recent results in which advanced photochromic diarylethenes are combined with MOFs through covalent and non-covalent methods to create photo-responsive permanently porous crystalline materials. This presentation will describe the design, synthesis, and characterization of next-generation photo-switchable diarylethene based ligands which are subsequently used to photo-responsive MOFs. These UBMOF crystals are, by design, isostructural with previously reported non-photoresponsive frameworks which enables a systematic comparison of their physical and chemical properties. While the photoswitching of the isolated ligand in solution is fully reversible, the cycloreversion reaction is suppressed in the UBMOF single crystalline phase. Spectroscopic evidence for thermally induced cycloreversion will be presented, as well as a detailed analysis addressing the limits of X-ray diffraction techniques applied to these systems.


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