Catalytic activities modulated by flexible bimetallic metal–organic frameworks
Literature Information
Xiang He
Flexible metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) have been attracting increasing attention in stimuli-responsive applications. However, the effects of the MOF's structural transition on catalysis have been largely unexplored. Herein, the dynamic behaviors and catalytic ability of a flexible bimetallic MOF (i.e., MIL-88B(Fe/Co)) were systematically investigated through density functional theory calculations, which suggested rotary metal nodes and twisted ligands upon lattice contraction, subsequently leading to variable performances in the oxygen evolution reaction as confirmed by the differences in the free energy diagrams. To correlate the catalytic performance with the structural dynamics of the MOFs, partial pair distribution function analysis was carried out, which demonstrated that the short-range order of MIL-88B(Fe/Co) is unaffected by the lattice expansion/contraction, suggesting the intact bond connectivity during the structural transition. The bonding nature of the bimetallic MOF was further investigated through electron localization function analysis, which revealed that structural modulation poses negligible impacts on the bonding interactions in the metal nodes while the contracted structures can cause a closely packed framework. The dependence of the catalytic performance on the dynamic structures demonstrated in this work suggests that the structural transition of the flexible MOFs can be exploited to alter the energy barriers of the elementary steps during the catalysis processes, offering potential avenues to achieving better control over the catalytic pathways for enhanced efficiency.
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CrystEngComm

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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