Subhadip
Goswami
a,
Debmalya
Ray
b,
Ken-ichi
Otake
a,
Chung-Wei
Kung
a,
Sergio J.
Garibay
a,
Timur
Islamoglu
a,
Ahmet
Atilgan
a,
Yuexing
Cui
a,
Christopher J.
Cramer
b,
Omar K.
Farha
ac and
Joseph T.
Hupp
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208, USA. E-mail: j-hupp@northwestern.edu
bDepartment of Chemistry, Chemical Theory Center, Minnesota Supercomputing Institute, University of Minnesota, 207 Pleasant Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
cDepartment of Chemistry, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah 21589, Saudi Arabia
First published on 11th April 2018
Engendering electrical conductivity in high-porosity metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) promises to unlock the full potential of MOFs for electrical energy storage, electrocatalysis, or integration of MOFs with conventional electronic materials. Here we report that a porous zirconium-node-containing MOF, NU-901, can be rendered electronically conductive by physically encapsulating C60, an excellent electron acceptor, within a fraction (ca. 60%) of the diamond-shaped cavities of the MOF. The cavities are defined by node-connected tetra-phenyl-carboxylated pyrene linkers, i.e. species that are excellent electron donors. The bulk electrical conductivity of the MOF is shown to increase from immeasurably low to 10−3 S cm−1, following fullerene incorporation. The observed conductivity originates from electron donor–acceptor interactions, i.e. charge-transfer interactions – a conclusion that is supported by density functional theory calculations and by the observation of a charge-transfer-derived band in the electronic absorption spectrum of the hybrid material. Notably, the conductive version of the MOF retains substantial nanoscale porosity and continues to display a sizable internal surface area, suggesting potential future applications that capitalize on the ability of the material to sorb molecular species.
Nevertheless, the demonstrated feasibility of deploying electrically conductive MOFs in field-effect transistors (FETs),25 chemiresistive sensors,26 electrochromic devices,27,28 supercapacitors29,30 and batteries,31 has motivated the search for suitably conductive MOFs. The common design rule is to provide a low energy pathway for charge transport, and reported strategies include: (a) π stacking of conjugated organic ligands,32 (b) formulation of MOFs as laterally conjugated 2D coordination compounds,33 (c) templating the growth of conductive polymers within suitably large MOF channels,34,35 (d) intentionally matching energies of frontier orbitals of metal-ion nodes and organic linkers,36 (e) post-synthetic modification or augmentation of MOF nodes, either with metals featuring partially filled d-shells32 or with redox couples such as ferrocenium/ferrocene,37 to yield redox-hopping-type conductivity, and (f) electrochemically oxidizing or reducing the linkers of solution-immersed MOFs, again to enable redox-hopping-type conduction.38,39
The availability of free space within MOFs suggests another route to eliciting electrical conductivity, namely, the incorporation of guest molecules (electron acceptors or donors) that are complementary, in a charge-transfer sense, to MOF nodes or linkers.40,41 The approach has clear parallels, for example, to the formation of conductive, organic charge-transfer salts by combining (co-crystallizing) a strong electron donor (D), such as tetrathiafulvalene (TTF), with a strong electron acceptor (A) such as tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ). Generally, in order to effectively transport charges, long-range ordering of donor and acceptor components is necessary. MOFs, with their inherent crystallinity and their ability to encapsulate guest molecules, offer platforms for achieving the desired long-range ordering of electronically complementary species. In a groundbreaking study, Talin et al. demonstrated that infiltration of the microporous MOF Cu3(btc)2 (also known as HKUST-1; btc = 1,3,5-benzenetricarboxylate) with TCNQ boosts the MOF's electrical conductivity by a remarkable six orders of magnitude (i.e., from 10−8 S cm−1 to 0.07 S cm−1).42 The basis for increase is the ligation of open Cu(II) sites by TCNQ nitrile groups such that a continuous charge-transfer pathway is formed (each TCNQ is thought to connect to four copper ions, with the overall Cu(II)trimesate unit functioning as an electron donor, and TCNQ as an acceptor).43 Among other D–A pairs incorporated within MOFs to study charge transfer are: (a) TTF/naphthalenetetracarboxydiimide (NDI),44,45 (b) oligothiophene/[6,6]-phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM),44,46 and (c) N,N′-bis(4-pyridyl)-2,6-dipyrrolidyl napthalenediimide/methylviologen.47 However, only in case (c) has bulk electrical conductivity been investigated (with a 35-fold increase in conductivity accompanying viologen incorporation).
Among the challenges in using guest infiltrated MOFs for device applications are: (a) limited stability of the MOF, as most of the MOFs evaluated to date feature comparatively weakly ligating nodes containing Zn(II), Cu(II) or Ni(II), and (b) substantial loss of porosity upon guest inclusion. For example, after TCNQ infiltration, the BET surface area of HKUST-1 decreases from 1844 ± 4 m2 g−1 to 214 ± 0.5 m2 g−1. Hence it is of particular interest to design stable and porous electrically conductive MOFs. Stability can be defined in many ways. For oxidative heterogeneous catalysis of gas phase reactions, thermal stability is typically paramount, while for solution-phase electrocatalysis processes such as water splitting, aqueous stability may be paramount.
These stability considerations are well satisfied by MOFs featuring Zr(IV)-oxygen(anion) coordination as the basis for node and linker connectivity.48–51 With this in mind, we settled on a high-surface-area MOF, NU-901,28,52 as a guest-accessible, electron-donating scaffold, and the iconic electron acceptor, buckminsterfullerene (C60) as the complementary component for studies of MOF electrical conductivity. Notably, there are previous reports on C60 incorporation within the MOF channels, the earliest being a report from Chae et al.53 To our knowledge, however, this is the first report of host–guest interaction to induce electrical conductivity in an otherwise insulating zirconium based MOF.
NU-901 consists of Zr6(μ3-O)4(μ3-OH)4(H2O)4(OH)4 nodes and tetratopic 1,3,6,8-tetrakis(p-benzoate)pyrene (TBAPy4−) linkers. We hypothesized that NU-901 would be an attractive candidate for encapsulation of C60 and electronic activation due to: (a) the availability of diamond-shaped channels that can withstand removal of synthesis solvent and that are reasonably well size-matched to C60 (van der waals diameter ∼7 Å), (b) the modest onset potential for electrochemical oxidation of NU-901,28 which suggests that its linkers may be strong enough donors to form charge-transfer complexes with easily reducible fullerenes, and (c) the arrangement of the diamond-shaped voids, as defined by the scu topology of the MOF, which should allow for a spatially continuous network of charge-transfer type interactions (and, therefore, electrical conductivity) in the a-b plane.
The porosity of both NU-901 and NU-901-C60 was confirmed by nitrogen adsorption–desorption measurements (Fig. 2b). Both display approximately type I isotherms, albeit with slight hysteresis presumably arising from inter-crystallite macroporosity. Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) analyses of the isotherms return gravimetric surface areas of 2120 m2 g−1 for guest-free NU-901 and 1550 m2 g−1 for NU-901-C60. DFT pore-size distribution analyses of the isotherms reveal a large peak centered at 12 Å, together with a small peak at 27 Å. The former is consistent with the crystallographically observed diamond-shaped pores of NU-901. The latter we speculatively attribute to pores associated with defects.
After installation of C60, the incremental pore volume corresponding to the diamond shaped channels decreased from 0.54 cm3 g−1 to 0.38 cm3 g−1, whereas the pore volume remains unchanged for pores generated by defect sites, suggesting fullerenes primarily reside within the diamond channels of the MOF (Fig. 2c). From the decrease in gravimetric pore volume, we estimate that the fullerene incorporation to be ∼0.6 per node (∼0.6 per linker-defined diamond void). Notably, DFT calculations (geometry optimized) show siting in diamond pores is overwhelmingly energetically favored (by 0.8 eV) compared to siting in the smaller pores defined by pairs of nodes along the c axis (Fig. S8b†). The representations in the bottom of Fig. 1 are derived from the DFT geometry.54
C60 encapsulation by NU-901 is accompanied by a change in color of the MOF from bright yellow to light brown. The visible color change is observable in corresponding diffuse reflectance UV-visible absorption spectra (Fig. S2a†). Guest-free NU-901 shows a broad absorption band beginning at 490 nm (2.53 eV) and maximizing in the UV, with no absorption beyond 490 nm. The spectrum of NU-901-C60 likewise displays the UV-blue band, but also presents a broad band extending from 500 nm to 700 nm (∼1.77 eV). We attribute the new band to a donor/acceptor (pyrene linker/C60) charge-transfer transition.55 Consistent with the introduction of a strong electron acceptor,56,57 the encapsulated fullerene quenches the steady-state luminescence of the tetra-phenyl-pyrene linker by ca. 90%; see Fig. S2b.†
Qualitative assessments of electrical conductivity were made by first dropcasting MOF suspensions on interdigitated array electrodes (IDEs; 5 μm gap) and then recording the current (I) transmitted between the electrodes, via electrode-gap-spanning MOF crystallites, in response to applied biases (V; two-point measurements). NU-901-C60 samples yielded measurable currents whereas guest-free crystallites of NU-901 did not; see Fig. S7.† Unfortunately, we were unable with this approach to quantify the conductivity, σ, of NU-901-C60. We therefore turned to macroscopic, two-point, I–V measurements using pressed pellets. The stability of the MOF pellets before and after C60 encapsulation was verified by PXRD and nitrogen adsorption isotherms (Fig. S3 and S4†). Consistent with IDE measurements, NU-901 alone displayed no measurable conductivity (where the lower limit of detection is estimated, from the magnitude of electrode noise, to be about 10−14 S cm−1). In contrast (Fig. 3), NU-901-C60 shows remarkable electrical conductivity of σ ∼ 10−3 S cm−1,58i.e. eleven orders of magnitude (or more) greater than NU-901 alone, and similar to that of organic semiconductors (σ > 10−6 S cm−1).59 Unlike conventional organic semiconductors, however, the MOF/fullerene material is characterized by substantial internal surface area and considerable molecular-scale porosity.
Fig. 3 Current (I) vs. voltage (V) plot for pressed pellets of NU-901 and NU-901-C60. The scan was performed from −2 V to 2 V and the scan rate was 50 mV s−1. |
We reasoned that if TBAPy4−/C60 donor/acceptor interactions are responsible for the observed electrical conductivity, increasing the strength of the MOF linker as an electron donor would increase the conductivity. We therefore replaced TBAPy4− with a tetra-amino (phenyl-substituted) analogue.60 PXRD (Fig. S6†) and SEM (Fig. S1†) assessments of NU-901-amino-C60 indicated formation of a material that is structurally similar (Fig. S5†) to NU-901-C60 (see (Fig. S5†)). N2 adsorption and desorption measurements established the permanent porosity of the material, and yielded BET surface area of 980 m2 g−1 for NU-901-amino and 370 m2 g−1 for NU-901-amino-C60 (Fig. S6†). IDE based measurements show that C60 incorporation imparts electrical conductivity to NU-901-amino, with the observed currents being larger for NU-901-amino-C60 than for NU-901-C60;61 see Fig. S7.†
Next we turn our attention to density functional theory (the details of the methods used are in the ESI†) to gain further insight into the nature of the observed electron-donor/electron-acceptor interactions and their manifestation as electrical conductivity in the MOF/fullerene assemblies. The results of electronic density of states (DOS) calculations for NU-901, NU-901-amino, NU-901-C60 and NU-901-amino-C60 are summarized in Fig. S9.† Briefly, for the guest-free MOFs, both the valence band maximum (VBM) and conduction band minimum (CBM) are dominated by contributions from linker p orbitals (i.e., those that contribute to the linkers' aromatic systems). For the C60-containing materials, the VBM remains predominantly linker defined, but the CBM consists of fullerene p orbitals, consistent with donor/acceptor complex formation. The calculated CBM – VBM difference, i.e. the nominal bandgap, decreases by 1.2 eV with incorporation of C60, a result that is qualitatively replicated in the visible-region reflectance spectra for fullerene-containing versus fullerene-free versions of the MOF (note that DFT methods often underestimate absolute magnitudes of bandgaps, particularly when local functionals like PBE are used).62,63
Given the spatial and energetic proximity of the putative donors and acceptors and their associated bands, we also calculated charge-transfer integrals for relevant clusters cut from the NU-901-C60 and NU-901-amino-C60 periodic structures (Table S1†). Both the electron-transfer and hole-transfer integrals are larger (by 2- and 4-fold, respectively) for NU-901-amino-C60 compared to NU-901-C60, consistent with larger IDE currents for the amino version.30
Finally, while electrocatalysis applications are beyond the scope of this initial report, it is worth considering how much conductivity is needed for a MOF to function effectively in that context. A common motif for electrochemical applications of MOFs is a thin film (a fraction of a micron to several microns thick) sited on a conventionally conductive platform – for example, a planar glassy carbon or platinum electrode. A benchmark catalytic current density for solar-driven electrochemical processes is 10 mA cm−2. For a hypothetical 10 micron thick MOF film having the modest conductivity observed here, i.e., ∼10−3 S cm−1, and operating at 10 mA cm−2, the energetic penalty (i-R drop) due to film resistivity would be just 10 mV – a value barely within the reproducibility of kinetic overpotentials for many electrocatalytic systems. We suggest that for these types of applications, conductivities in the range of 10−3 S cm−1, despite falling in the semiconducting regime (phenomenologically),64 will typically be sufficient.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Specifics on materials used, synthesis of the MOFs, fabrication of pressed pellets for conductivity measurements, details of characterization, instrumentation, and computational methods are available in the supporting information. See DOI: 10.1039/c8sc00961a |
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