Abstract
The
most conductive MOFs are those made from organic ligands and square-planar
transition metal ions connected into two-dimensional (2D) sheets that stack in
a similar manner to the graphene sheets in graphite. Their electrical
properties are thought to depend critically on the covalency of the
metal-ligand bond. Much less importance is given to charge transport normal to
the 2D sheets, not least because there is little synthetic opportunity to
control their stacking sequence or distance. Here, we report exquisite control
over the stacking sequence and distance in a series of materials made from 2D
sheets of organic ligands connected in the third dimension by infinite
lanthanide-oxygen chains. Contrary to transition metal MOFs, efficient charge
transport leading to conductivity values of up to 0.5 S/cm in the lanthanide
materials occurs primarily normal to the 2D sheets. We further show that the
smaller lanthanides Yb3+ and Ho3+ enforce a shorter
stacking distance of only 3.002(6) Å and afford consistently higher
conductivity than the larger lanthanides Nd3+ and La3+,
which distend the sheets up to 3.068(2) Å. This first systematic study of
structure-function relationships in layered conductive MOFs is enabled by the
high degree of crystallinity afforded by the relatively ionic lanthanide-ligand
bonds. These results demonstrate that increasing the covalency of the
metal-ligand bond is not the only viable path to achieve record conductivity in
2D MOFs, and that the interactions of the organic ligands alone can produce
efficient charge transport pathways.