Publications by authors named "Timur İslamoglu"

Article Synopsis
  • Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have versatile applications in energy, environment, and sustainability, particularly in adsorbing toxic gases and pollutants, but creating a single MOF effective for multiple gases is difficult due to their varying properties.
  • Integrating several MOFs onto textile fibers through a dip-coating method enhances durability and flexibility, making them suitable for critical applications like chemical sensing and toxic gas adsorption.
  • The study demonstrates that these multi-MOF composites effectively capture harmful gases and react with chemical warfare agents, marking a significant step in improving protective equipment for real-world threats.
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Surface barriers are commonly observed in nanoporous materials. Although researchers have explored methods to repair defects or create flawless crystals to mitigate surface barriers, these approaches may not always be practical or readily achievable in targeted metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). In our study, we propose an alternative approach focusing on the introduction of diverse ligands onto a MOF-808 node to finely adjust its adsorption and mass transport characteristics.

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Article Synopsis
  • Sulfur dioxide (SO) is a harmful gas primarily produced by power plants and fossil fuel use, posing serious health and environmental threats.
  • Benzimidazole-linked polymers (BILPs) have shown promise as effective materials for capturing SO due to their stability and unique chemical properties, achieving high uptake rates of up to 8.5 mmol g under specific conditions.
  • The study demonstrates that BILPs have strong interactions with SO, enabling efficient adsorption and easy regeneration, along with high selectivity for SO over other gases like carbon dioxide and methane, suggesting their potential use in reducing SO emissions from various sources.
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Enzymes are natural catalysts for a wide range of metabolic chemical transformations, including selective hydrolysis, oxidation, and phosphorylation. Herein, we demonstrate a strategy for the encapsulation of enzymes within a highly stable zirconium-based metal-organic framework. UiO-66-F was synthesized under mild conditions using an enzyme-compatible amino acid modulator, serine, at a modest temperature in an aqueous solution.

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Organophosphorus chemicals, including chemical warfare agents (CWAs) and insecticides, are acutely toxic materials that warrant capture and degradation. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have emerged as a class of tunable, porous, crystalline materials capable of hydrolytically cleaving, and thus detoxifying, several organophosphorus nerve agents and their simulants. One such MOF is M-MFU-4l (M = metal), a bioinspired azolate framework whose metal node is composed of a variety of divalent first-row transition metals.

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CALF-20, a Zn-triazolate-based metal-organic framework (MOF), is one of the most promising adsorbent materials for CO capture. However, competitive adsorption of water severely limits its performance when the relative humidity (RH) exceeds 40%, limiting the potential implementation of CALF-20 in practical settings where CO is saturated with moisture, such as postcombustion flue gas. In this work, three newly designed MOFs related to CALF-20, denoted as NU-220, CALF-20M-w, and CALF-20M-e that feature hydrophobic methyltriazolate linkers, are presented.

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Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have demonstrated their versatility in a wide range of applications, including chemical separation, gas capture, and storage. In industrial adsorption processes, MOFs are integral to the creation of selective gas adsorption fixed beds. In this context, the assessment of their separation performance under relevant conditions often relies on breakthrough experiments.

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Article Synopsis
  • Hexane isomers are important in the petrochemical industry but their similar properties make them hard to separate, resulting in energy-intensive processes with high carbon footprints.
  • There’s a push for nonthermal separation methods, like adsorption with solid sorbents or membranes, which could be more efficient.
  • The study introduces two new metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), NU-2004 and NU-2005, that are structurally stable and significantly improve the separation of hexane isomers compared to existing MOFs.
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The increase in the atmospheric carbon dioxide level is a significant threat to our planet, and therefore the selective removal of CO from the air is a global concern. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a class of porous materials that have shown exciting potential as adsorbents for CO capture due to their high surface area and tunable properties. Among several implemented technologies, direct air capture (DAC) using MOFs is a promising strategy for achieving climate targets as it has the potential to actively reduce the atmospheric CO concentration to a safer levels.

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Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) that contain open metal sites have the potential for storing hydrogen (H) at ambient temperatures. In particular, Cu(I)-based MOFs demonstrate very high isosteric heats of adsorption for hydrogen relative to other reported MOFs with open metal sites. However, most of these Cu(I)-based MOFs are not stable in ambient conditions since the Cu(I) species display sensitivity toward moisture and can rapidly oxidize in air.

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Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with Lewis acid catalytic sites, such as zirconium-based MOFs (Zr-MOFs), comprise a growing class of phosphatase-like nanozymes that can degrade toxic organophosphate pesticides and nerve agents. Rationally engineering and shaping MOFs from as-synthesized powders into hierarchically porous monoliths is essential for their use in emerging applications, such as filters for air and water purification and personal protection gear. However, several challenges still limit the production of practical MOF composites, including the need for sophisticated reaction conditions, low MOF catalyst loadings in the resulting composites, and poor accessibility to MOF-based active sites.

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Polymer/metal-organic framework (MOF) composites have been widely studied for their favorable combination of polymer flexibility and MOF crystallinity. While traditional polymer-coated MOFs maximize the polymer properties at the surface, the dramatic loss of MOF porosity due to blockage by the nonporous polymeric coating remains a problem. Herein, we introduce intrinsically microporous synthetic allomelanin (AM) as a porous coating on the zirconium-based MOF (Zr-MOF) UiO-66 via an in situ surface-constrained oxidative polymerization of the AM precursor, 1,8-dihydroxynaphthalene (1,8-DHN).

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Article Synopsis
  • Carbon capture, storage, and utilization (CCSU) offers a way to reduce carbon emissions linked to climate change, with metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) showing promise as effective CO sorbents due to their structure and versatility.* -
  • The study focuses on understanding the dynamic behavior of the pores in MOF-808, showing that the internal pore environment is not static as previously thought, which can inform better designs for CCSU materials.* -
  • By using techniques like DRIFTS and powder X-ray diffraction, the research finds that certain variants of MOF-808 have enhanced CO binding affinity and suggests that the structural dynamics of these materials can improve CO binding performance.*
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Organophosphorus nerve agents are among the most toxic chemicals known and remain threats to humans due to their continued use despite international bans. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have emerged as a class of heterogeneous catalysts with tunable structures that are capable of rapidly detoxifying these chemicals via hydrolysis at Lewis acidic active sites on the metal nodes. To date, the majority of studies in this field have focused on zirconium-based MOFs (Zr-MOFs) that contain hexanuclear Zr(IV) clusters, despite the large toolbox of Lewis acidic transition metal ions that are available to construct MOFs with similar catalytic properties.

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Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are highly tunable materials with potential for use as porous media in non-thermal adsorption or membrane-based separations. However, many separations target molecules with sub-angstrom differences in size, requiring precise control over the pore size. Herein, we demonstrate that this precise control can be achieved by installing a three-dimensional linker in an MOF with one-dimensional channels.

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Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have been proposed as a promising material for non-thermal chemical separations owing to their high structural diversity and tunability. Here, we report the synthesis of a zinc-based MOF containing a three-dimensional (3D) linker, bicyclo[2.2.

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Tröger's base (TB) and its derivatives have been studied extensively due to their unique concave shape stemming from the endomethylene strap. However, the strap-clipped TB chemistry has been largely overlooked in metal-organic framework (MOF) solids, leading to a gap in our knowledge within this field. In this work, we report the in situ strap elimination of a carboxylate-carrying TB in the presence of formic acid, both in solution and in Zr(IV)-based MOFs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers are exploring the use of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) for hydrocarbon separations to potentially lower energy costs compared to traditional distillation methods.
  • There is currently a lack of experimental data on how hydrocarbons move through these MOFs, which is crucial for understanding their effectiveness and improving future designs.
  • This study focuses on the impact of pore size on hydrocarbon diffusion by examining two similar MOFs and measuring the transport rates of different hydrocarbons, revealing key trends related to pore size, molecular length, and temperature.
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Proteins immobilized in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) often show extraordinary stability. However, most efforts to immobilize proteins in MOFs have only been exploratory. Herein, we present the first systematic study on the thermodynamics of protein immobilization in MOFs.

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Atomically precise cerium oxo clusters offer a platform to investigate structure-property relationships that are much more complex in the ill-defined bulk material cerium dioxide. We investigated the activity of the MCe torus family (M = Cd, Ce, Co, Cu, Fe, Ni, and Zn), a family of discrete oxysulfate-based Ce rings linked by monomeric cation units, for CO oxidation. CuCe emerged as the best performing MCe catalyst among those tested, prompting our exploration of the role of the interfacial unit on catalytic activity.

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Ammonia (NH), often stored in large quantities before being used in the production of fertilizer, and sulfur dioxide (SO), a byproduct of fossil fuel consumption, particularly the burning of coal, are highly toxic and corrosive gases that pose a significant danger to humans if accidentally released. Therefore, developing advanced materials to enable their effective capture and safe storage is highly desired. Herein, advanced benzimidazole-derived carbons (BIDCs) with an exceptional capacity for NH and SO have been designed and tested.

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Industrial-scale thermal separation processes have contributed greatly to the rise in carbon dioxide emissions. Porous materials, such as metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), can potentially reduce these emissions by achieving nonthermal chemical separations through the physical adsorption of targeted species with high selectivity. Here, we report the synthesis of the channel-based MOFs and , which are constructed from three-dimensional (3D) linkers, to separate the industrially relevant xylene isomers under ambient conditions by leveraging sub-Ångstrom differences in the sizes of each isomer.

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Porosity and surface area analysis play a prominent role in modern materials science. At the heart of this sits the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) theory, which has been a remarkably successful contribution to the field of materials science. The BET method was developed in the 1930s for open surfaces but is now the most widely used metric for the estimation of surface areas of micro- and mesoporous materials.

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Polyoxometalates (POMs) are versatile materials for chemical catalysis due to their tunable acidity and rich redox properties. While POMs have attracted significant attention in homogeneous catalysis, challenges regarding aggregation and instability in solvents often prevent the wide implementation of POMs as heterogeneous catalysts. Therefore, the successful incorporation of a POM into a solid support, such as a polymer, is desirable for practical applications where unique functionalities of the POM combine with the advantages of the polymer.

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Article Synopsis
  • Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with open metal sites have useful applications in various fields.
  • The research involves replacing carboxylate linkers with triazolate coordination in Zn-MOF-74 through a technique called solvent-assisted linker exchange (SALE).
  • This results in the creation of a new MOF, termed NU-250, which is part of the hexagonal channel-based MAF-X25 series and has not been synthesized before.
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