The structure of HPM-3, a layered aluminophosphate prepared using 1,2,3-trimethylimidazolium (123TMI) as an organic structure-directing agent by the fluoride route, has been solved by continuous rotation electron diffraction (cRED), and Rietveld refined against synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction data. Charge balance of the occluded cation is achieved through F anions and dangling Al(OP)OH groups. Half of the Al is pentacoordinated in negatively charged Al(OP)-F-Al(OP) pairs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor zeolites synthesized using imidazolium cations, the organic matter can be extracted at very low temperatures (100 °C) using ozone. This is possible for zeolites with 12-ring or larger pores but requires higher temperatures in medium-pore zeolites. The first chemical events in this process occur fast, even at room temperature, and imply the loss of aromaticity likely by the formation of an adduct between ozone and the imidazole ring through carbons C4 and C5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStable aluminosilicate zeolites with extra-large pores that are open through rings of more than 12 tetrahedra could be used to process molecules larger than those currently manageable in zeolite materials. However, until very recently, they proved elusive. In analogy to the interlayer expansion of layered zeolite precursors, we report a strategy that yields thermally and hydrothermally stable silicates by expansion of a one-dimensional silicate chain with an intercalated silylating agent that separates and connects the chains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZeolite stability, in terms of lattice energy, is revisited from a crystal-chemistry point of view. A linearized equation relates the zeolite lattice energy using simple structural data readily available from experiments or modeling. The equation holds for a large range of zeolite energies, up to 3 eV per tetrahedron with respect to quartz, and has been validated internally via two simple machine learning automatic procedures for data fitting/reference partitions and externally using data from recently synthesized zeolites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have become promising materials for multiple applications due to their controlled dimensionality and tunable properties. The incorporation of chirality into their frameworks opens new strategies for chiral separation, a key technology in the pharmaceutical industry as each enantiomer of a racemic drug must be isolated. Here, we describe the use of a combination of computational modeling and experiments to demonstrate that high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) columns packed with as the chiral stationary phase are efficient, versatile, robust, and reusable with a wide array of mobile phases (polar and non-polar).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have studied the clusters involved in the initial stages of nucleation of Zeolitic Imidazolate Frameworks, employing a wide range of computational techniques. In the pre-nucleating solution, the prevalent cluster is the ZnIm cluster (formed by a zinc cation, Zn, and four imidazolate anions, Im), although clusters such as ZnIm, ZnIm, ZnIm, ZnIm, ZnIm, or ZnIm have energies that are not much higher, so they would also be present in solution at appreciable quantities. All these species, except ZnIm, have a tetrahedrally coordinated Zn cation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeparation of volatile organic compounds is one of the most studied processes in industry. TAMOF-1 is a homochiral metal-organic framework with a crystalline network of interconnected ≈1 nm channels and has high thermal and chemical stability. Thanks to these features, it can resolve racemic mixtures of chiral drugs as a chiral stationary phase in chromatography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany key features in photovoltaic perovskites occur in relatively long time scales and involve mixed compositions. This requires realistic but also numerically simple models. In this work we present a transferable classical force field to describe the mixed hybrid perovskite MAFAPb(BrI) for variable composition (∀, ∈ [0, 1]).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne common strategy in the search for new zeolites is the use of organic structure-directing agents (OSDA). Typically, one seeks to achieve a high specificity in the structure-directing effect of the OSDA. This study shows, however, that an OSDA lacking strong specificity towards any particular zeolite may provide opportunities for discovery when other synthesis parameters are systematically screened.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHPM-16 is a highly porous germanosilicate zeolite with an interrupted framework that contains a three-dimensional system of 12+10×10(12)×12+10-membered ring (MR) pores. The 10(12) MR pore in the b direction is a 10 MR pore with long 12 MR stretches forming 30 Å long tubular supercages. Along one direction the 10 MR pores are fused, meaning that the separation between adjacent pores consists of a single tetrahedron that is, additionally, connected to only three additional tetrahedra (a Q ).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe stability of metal-organic frameworks is a key factor in many applications in some fields that require working under harsh conditions. It is known that a large number of MOFs are vulnerable to humid air. It means that when they are exposed to water, a structural collapse of the crystal happens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelective separation of enantiomers is a substantial challenge for the pharmaceutical industry. Chromatography on chiral stationary phases is the standard method, but at a very high cost for industrial-scale purification due to the high cost of the chiral stationary phases. Typically, these materials are poorly robust, expensive to manufacture, and often too specific for a single desired substrate, lacking desirable versatility across different chiral analytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCarbon dioxide release has become an important global issue due to the significant and continuous rise in atmospheric CO concentrations and the depletion of carbon-based energy resources. Plasmolysis is a very energy-efficient process for reintroducing CO into energy and chemical cycles by converting CO into CO and O utilizing renewable electricity. The bottleneck of the process is that CO remains mixed with O and residual CO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGas adsorption over zeolites is at the basis of important applications of this class of microporous crystalline solids, notably as separation media and catalysts, but it may also be complex and not straightforward to understand. Here we report that for temperature below 323 K propane adsorption on the small-pore pure-silica zeolite ITW exhibits a clear step (pseudosaturation). This is absent in the case of propene and the other small linear alkanes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular simulation, through the computation of adsorption isotherms, is a useful predictive tool for the selective capacity of nanoporous materials. Generally, adsorbents are modelled as rigid frameworks, as opposed to allowing for vibrations of the lattice, and this approximation is assumed to have negligible impact on adsorption. In this work, this approach was tested in an especially challenging system by computing the adsorption of the chiral molecules 2-pentanol, 2-methylbutanol and 3-methyl-2-butanol in the all-silica and germanosilicate chiral zeolites STW and studying their lattice vibrations upon adsorption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControlling thermal expansion is an important, not yet resolved, and challenging problem in materials research. A conceptual design is introduced here, for the first time, for the use of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as platforms for controlling thermal expansion devices that can operate in the negative, zero, and positive expansion regimes. A detailed computer simulation study, based on molecular dynamics, is presented to support the targeted application.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncorporation of germanium in zeolites is well known to confer static flexibility to their framework, by stabilizing the formation of small rings. In this work, we show that the flexibility associated to Ge atoms in zeolites goes beyond this static effect, manifesting also a clear dynamic nature, in the sense that it leads to enhanced molecular diffusion. Our study combines experimental and theoretical methods providing evidence for this effect, which has not been described previously, as well as a rationalization for it, based on atomistic grounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeparation of challenging mixtures using metal-organic frameworks can be achieved by an entropy-driven mechanism, where one of the components can arrange into a "face-to-face" stacking, thus reducing its "footprint" and reaching a higher saturation loading.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF