Local Coordination Environment of Lanthanides Adsorbed onto Cr- and Zr-based Metal-Organic Frameworks.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

Geochemistry Department, Sandia National Laboratories, 1515 Eubank SE Mailstop 0754, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185-0754, United States.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Separating lanthanide elements from aqueous mixtures is difficult, but ion-selective capture using porous materials like metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) shows promise.
  • Understanding the local coordination environment of lanthanides (Nd(III), Gd(III), Lu(III)) within specific MOFs (Cr-MIL-101, UiO-66, UiO-68) is essential for designing effective ion-selective MOFs.
  • Functionalizing MOFs with specific groups can enhance lanthanide capture by improving interactions at metal oxo cluster sites and enabling selective binding over metal sites.

Article Abstract

Separating individual lanthanide (Ln) elements in aqueous mixtures is challenging. Ion-selective capture by porous materials, such as metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), is a promising approach. To design ion-selective MOFs, molecular details of the Ln adsorption complexes within the MOFs must be understood. We determine the local coordination environment of lanthanides Nd(III), Gd(III), and Lu(III) adsorbed onto Cr(III)-based terephthalate MOF (Cr-MIL-101) and Zr(IV)-based Universitet in Oslo MOFs (UiO-66 and UiO-68) and their derivatives. In the Cr(III)- and Zr(IV)-based MOFs, Ln adsorb as inner-sphere complexes at the metal oxo clusters, regardless of whether the organic linkers are decorated with amino groups. Missing linkers result in favorable Ln binding sites at oxo clusters; however, Ln can coordinate to metal sites even with linkers in place. MOF functionalization with phosphonate groups led to Ln chemisorption onto these groups, which out-compete metal cluster sites. Ln form monodentate and bidentate and mononuclear and binuclear surface complexes. We conclude that MOFs for ion-selective Ln capture can be designed by a combination of (1) maximizing metal-lanthanide interactions via shared O atoms at the metal oxo cluster sites, where mixed oxo clusters can lead to ion-selective Ln adsorption, and (2) functionalizing MOFs with Ln-selective groups capable of out-completing the metal oxo cluster sites.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c09445DOI Listing

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