Photoluminescent layered lanthanide–organic framework based on a novel trifluorotriphosphonate organic linker

Literature Information

Publication Date 2013-10-15
DOI 10.1039/C3CE41482E
Impact Factor 3.545
Authors

José A. Fernandes, Duarte Ananias, Luís D. Carlos, João Rocha, João P. C. Tomé, Filipe A. Almeida Paz


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Abstract

A series of fluorinated lanthanide–organic frameworks (LnOFs), formulated as [Ln(H3tftp)(H2O)] [where Ln3+ = La3+ (1), (La0.95Eu0.05)3+ (2), (La0.95Tb0.05)3+ (3) and (La0.94Eu0.03Tb0.03)3+ (4)], has been successfully prepared, under hydrothermal conditions, using the novel ((2,4,6-trifluorobenzene-1,3,5-triyl)tris(methylene))triphosphonic acid (H6tftp) organic ligand and Ln3+ cations as metallic centers. The three-step preparation of the tripodal H6tftp ligand is described. H6tftp and all intermediate molecules involved in the synthesis were fully characterized in the liquid and solid states. While the La3+-based LnOF material was isolated as single-crystals, with its crystal structure being fully described by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, phase identification of the Eu3+- and Tb3+-based materials was performed by powder X-ray diffraction. It is shown that the crystal structure of this isotypical series of materials is based on a neutral two-dimensional ∞2[Ln(H3tftp)(H2O)] coordination polymer placed in the ac plane of the unit cell, exhibiting a uninodal 4-connected square layered topology. It is shown that the most striking and supramolecular relevant interactions are classical O–H⋯O hydrogen bonds within the polymer, further contributing to the structural robustness of the layer. Prepared LnOFs were fully characterized in the solid state using elemental and thermogravimetric analysis, electron microscopy (SEM and EDS) and FT-IR spectroscopy. Compound 1 was further studied using solid-state NMR (31P HPDEC MAS and 13C{1H} CP MAS) and thermodiffractometry. Photoluminescent studies have been performed on the mixed-lanthanide materials 2 and 3.

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CrystEngComm

CrystEngComm
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CrystEngComm is the forum for the design and understanding of crystalline materials. We welcome studies on the investigation of molecular behaviour within crystals, control of nucleation and crystal growth, engineering of crystal structures, and construction of crystalline materials with tuneable properties and functions. We publish hypothesis-driven research into… how crystal design affects thermodynamics, phase transitional behaviours, polymorphism, morphology control, solid state reactivity (crystal-crystal solution-crystal, and gas-crystal reactions), optoelectronics, ferroelectric materials, non-linear optics, molecular and bulk magnetism, conductivity and quantum computing, catalysis, absorption and desorption, and mechanical properties. Using Techniques and methods including… Single crystal and powder X-ray, electron, and neutron diffraction, solid-state spectroscopy, spectrometry, and microscopy, modelling and data mining, and empirical, semi-empirical and ab-initio theoretical evaluations. On crystalline and solid-state materials. We particularly welcome work on MOFs, coordination polymers, nanocrystals, host-guest and multi-component molecular materials. We also accept work on peptides and liquid crystals. All papers should involve the use or development of a design or optimisation strategy. Routine structural reports or crystal morphology descriptions, even when combined with an analysis of properties or potential applications, are generally considered to be outside the scope of the journal and are unlikely to be accepted.

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