Towards General Network Architecture Design Criteria for Negative Gas Adsorption Transitions in Ultraporous Frameworks

13 March 2019, Version 1

Abstract

Critical design criteria for negative gas adsorption (NGA), a counterintuitive feature of pressure amplifying materials, hitherto uniquely observed in a highly porous framework compound (DUT-49), are derived by analysing the physical effects of micromechanics, pore size, interpenetration, adsorption enthalpies, and the pore filling mechanism using advanced in situ X-ray and neutron diffraction, NMR spectroscopy, and calorimetric techniques parallelized to adsorption for a series of six isoreticular networks. Aided by computational modelling, we identify DUT-50 as a new pressure amplifying material featuring distinct NGA transitions upon methane and argon adsorption. In situ neutron diffraction analysis of the methane (CD4) adsorption sites at 111 K supported by grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations reveals a sudden population of the largest mesopore to be the critical filling step initiating structural contraction and NGA. In contrast, interpenetration leads to framework stiffening and specific pore volume reduction, both factors effectively suppressing NGA transitions.

Keywords

metal-organic frameworks (MOFs)
adsorption-desorption
Negative Gas Adsorption
stimuli responsiveness
nanoporous

Supplementary materials

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Krause et al. Supplementary video
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MOF-FF optimized simulated structures
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SCXRD-cif
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Krause et al - Towards NGA design - ESI
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Supplementary weblinks

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