AVS 62nd International Symposium & Exhibition
    In-Situ Spectroscopy and Microscopy Focus Topic Wednesday Sessions
       Session IS+SS+NS+BI+VT+MN+AS-WeA

Paper IS+SS+NS+BI+VT+MN+AS-WeA10
Competitive Co-Adsorption of CO2 with H2O, NH3, SO2, NO, NO2, N2, O2, and CH4 in M-MOF-74 (M= Mg, Co, Ni): The Role of Hydrogen Bonding

Wednesday, October 21, 2015, 5:20 pm, Room 211B

Session: In situ Imaging of Liquids using Microfluidics
Presenter: Sebastian Zuluaga, Wake Forest University
Authors: K. Tan, The University of Texas at Dallas
S. Zuluaga, Wake Forest University
H. Wang, Rutgers University
Y. Gao, The University of Texas at Dallas
J. Li, Rutgers University
T. Thonhauser, Wake Forest University
Y.J. Chabal, The University of Texas at Dallas
Correspondent: Click to Email

The importance of co-adsorption for applications of porous materials in gas separation has motivated fundamental studies, which have initially focused on the comparison of the binding energies of different gas molecules in the pores (i.e. energetics) and their overall transport. By examining the competitive co-adsorption of several small molecules in M-MOF-74 (M= Mg, Co, Ni) with in-situ infrared spectroscopy and ab initio simulations, we find that the binding energy at the most favorable (metal) site is not a sufficient indicator for prediction of molecular adsorption and stability in MOFs. Instead, the occupation of the open metal sites is governed by kinetics, whereby the interaction of the guest molecules with the MOF organic linkers controls the reaction barrier for molecular exchange. Specifically, the displacement of CO2 adsorbed at the metal center by other molecules such as H2O, NH3, SO2, NO, NO2, N2, O2, and CH4 is mainly observed for H2O and NH3, even though SO2, NO, and NO2, have higher binding energies (~70-90 kJ/mol) to metal sites than that of CO2 (38 to 48 kJ/mol) andslightly higher than water (~60-80 kJ/mol). DFT simulations evaluate the barriers for H2OàCO2 and SO2àCO2 exchange to be ~ 13 and 20 kJ/mol, respectively, explaining the slow exchange of CO2 by SO2, compared to water. Furthermore, the calculations reveal that the kinetic barrier for this exchange is determined by the specifics of the interaction of the second guest molecule (e.g., H2O or SO2) with the MOF ligands. Hydrogen bonding of H2O molecules with the nearby oxygen of the organic linker is found to facilitate the positioning of the H2O oxygen atom towards the metal center, thus reducing the exchange barrier. In contrast, SO2 molecules interact with the distant benzene site, away from the metal center, hindering the exchange process. Similar considerations apply to the other molecules, accounting for much easier CO2 exchange for NH3 than for NO, NO2, CH4, O2, and N2 molecules. In this work, critical parameters such as kinetic barrier and exchange pathway are first unveiled and provide insight into the mechanism of competitive co-adsorption, underscoring the need of combined studies, using spectroscopic methods and ab initio simulations to uncover the atomistic interactions of small molecules in MOFs that directly influence co-adsorption.

Ref: K. Tan, S. Zuluaga, Q. Gong, Y. Gao, N. Nijem, J. Li, T. Thonhauser and Y. J. Chabal, Chem. Mater., 2015, 27, 2203-2217.