2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(227f) Molecular Insight into Water Effects in a Stable Metal-Organic Framework: An in-situ Experimental and Molecular Modeling Analysis
Authors
Nicholas C. Burtch - Presenter, Sandia National Laboratories
Krista Walton, Georgia Institute of Technology
Cody R. Morelock, Georgia Institute of Technology
Yang Jiao, Georgia Institute of Techonology
Jurn Heinen, University of Amsterdam
Julian T. Hungerford, Georgia Institute of Technology
David Dubbeldam, University of Amsterdam
Competitive water adsorption can have an important impact on metal-organic framework (MOF) performance properties. This can range from occupying active sites in catalytic reactions to co-adsorbing at the most favorable adsorption sites for gas separation and storage applications. The novel question addressed in this work is: for a MOF that is stable after moisture exposure, what are the reversible, loading-dependent structural changes that occur during water adsorption?
To explore this question, a combination of in situ synchrotron powder diffraction analysis and molecular simulation techniques are applied to provide insight into the important role of loading-dependent water effects in the stable Zn-DMOF-TM structure. Through this analysis, insight into changes to crystallographic lattice parameters, water siting information, and water-induced defect incorporation are obtained. Overall, this work shows that even for stable MOFs that maintain their porosity and crystallinity characteristics after water exposure, important molecular-level structural changes can still occur during water adsorption.