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Thermal stabilization of metal-organic framework-derived single site catalytic clusters through nanocasting
Malonzo, C. D., Shaker, S. M., Ren, L., Prinslow, S. D., Platero-Prats, A. E., Gallington, L. C., Borycz, J., Thompson, A. B., Wang, T. C., Farha, O. K., Hupp, J. T., Lu, C. C., Chapman, K. W., Myers, J. C., Penn, R. L., Gagliardi, L., Tsapatsis, M., & Stein, A. (2016). Thermal stabilization of metal-organic framework-derived single site catalytic clusters through nanocasting. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 138(8), 2739-2748. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b12688
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) provide convenient systems for organizing high concentrations of single catalytic sites derived from metallic or oxo-metallic nodes. However, high-temperature processes cause agglomeration of these nodes, so that the single-site character and catalytic activity are lost. In this work, we present a simple nanocasting approach to provide a thermally stable secondary scaffold for MOP-based catalytic single sites, preventing their aggregation even after exposure to air at 600 degrees C. We describe the nanocasting of NU-1000, a MOP with 3 nm channels and Lewis-acidic oxozirconium clusters, with silica. By condensing tetramethylorthosilicate within the NU-1000 pores via a vapor-phase HCl treatment, a silica layer is created on the inner walls of NU-1000. This silica layer provides anchoring sites for the oxozirconium clusters in NU-1000 after the organic linkers are removed at high temperatures. Differential pair distribution functions obtained from synchrotron X-ray scattering confirmed that isolated oxozirconium clusters are maintained in the heated nanocast materials. Pyridine adsorption experiments and a glucose isomerization reaction demonstrate that the clusters remain accessible to reagents and maintain their acidic character and catalytic activity even after the nanocast materials have been heated to 500-600 degrees C in air. Density functional theory calculations show a correlation between the Lewis acidity of the oxozirconium clusters and their catalytic activity. The ability to produce MOF-derived materials that retain their catalytic properties after exposure to high temperatures makes nanocasting a useful technique for obtaining single-site catalysts suitable for high-temperature reactions.
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