Issue 9, 2007

Charge distribution in metal organic framework materials: transferability to a preliminary molecular simulation study of the CO2 adsorption in the MIL-53 (Al) system

Abstract

Density functional theory calculations have been performed in order to extract the charge distribution in the aluminium-containing MIL-53 structure, to allow further computational studies of adsorption in these materials. Both cluster and periodic methods have been used and the charges calculated for each atom constituting the organic and inorganic part of the material, were discussed. Preliminary grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations, based on a consistent set of potential parameters and this newly derived charge distribution, predicted for enthalpies of adsorption for CO2 at low coverage in the “large” and “narrow” pore versions of MIL-53 (Al) to be significantly different. These calculated enthalpies reproduced the two distinct ranges of values observed by microcalorimetry on either side of 6 bars quite well. This agreement between experiment and simulation validated our previous assumption, suggesting a structural switching of the hybrid material during the adsorption process. The microscopic mode of interaction between the hybrid porous framework and the CO2 adsorption was then carefully analysed in both of the MIL-53 (Al) structures.

Graphical abstract: Charge distribution in metal organic framework materials: transferability to a preliminary molecular simulation study of the CO2 adsorption in the MIL-53 (Al) system

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Sep 2006
Accepted
30 Oct 2006
First published
15 Nov 2006

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2007,9, 1059-1063

Charge distribution in metal organic framework materials: transferability to a preliminary molecular simulation study of the CO2 adsorption in the MIL-53 (Al) system

N. A. Ramsahye, G. Maurin, S. Bourrelly, P. Llewellyn, T. Loiseau and G. Ferey, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2007, 9, 1059 DOI: 10.1039/B613378A

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