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      Effect of catenation and basicity of pillared ligands on the water stability of MOFs.

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          Abstract

          Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have extremely high surface areas and pore volumes, tunable pore sizes and chemical functionalities and are an interesting addition to the field of porous materials. One of the key challenges that needs to be overcome to elevate MOFs to the applied level is their sensitivity to humid environments. The work reported here seeks to address this critical issue by examining two important contributors to MOF stability or instability: basicity (pKa value) of the pillar ligand and catenation of the framework. Catenation is the interpenetration or interweaving of two or more identical and independent frameworks. We demonstrate that, using catenation in combination with a pillaring strategy, it is possible to obtain water stable MOFs even when the pillar ligand has lower basicity (pKa value). This study shows that after 90% relative humidity (RH) exposure, comparing Zn-BDC-DABCO (DMOF) and Zn-BDC-BPY (MOF-508), MOF-508 is stable due to its two-fold interpenetration that prevents significant water adsorption. In contrast, comparing non-catenated isostructural pillared MOFs Zn-TMBDC-DABCO (DMOF-TM) and Zn-TMBDC-BPY (MOF-508-TM), MOF-508-TM is unstable since BPY is less basic (higher pKa) and less rigid than DABCO.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Dalton Trans
          Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003)
          Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
          1477-9234
          1477-9226
          Nov 21 2013
          : 42
          : 43
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, 311 Ferst Dr. NW, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA. krista.walton@chbe.gatech.edu.
          Article
          10.1039/c3dt51819a
          24013951
          26c4d84f-b1e7-407b-bbcf-30d7d7fa4c86
          History

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