Atom orientation in the SBU induced conformational isomerism in the hydroxamate-based In-MOFs
Abstract
Although conformational isomerism is a common phenomenon in carboxylate-based metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), the conformational isomers of hydroxamate-based MOFs are still scarce. Herein, we report a rare example of conformational isomerism in MOFs with 1,4-benzenedihydroxamic acid (H2L). Three novel In-MOFs, [InL1.5]·H2O·DMF (1), [InL1.5]·4H2O (2), and (Me2NH2)[InL(pzdc)] (3) have been successfully constructed under solvothermal conditions (DMF = N,N-dimethylformamide; H2pzdc = 2,5-pyrazinedicarboxylic acid). Single-crystal structural analyses display that both 1 and 2 contain a distorted [InO6] octahedron where the four O atoms (O2, O3i, O4i, O6) in the equatorial plane are arranged in a counterclockwise direction in 1, whereas the corresponding atoms are located in a clockwise direction in 2. This minor difference of atom orientation in the secondary building units (SBU) induces MOFs 1 and 2 as conformational isomers, the first example of conformational isomerism in hydroxamate-based MOFs. Moreover, MOFs 1 and 2 exhibit the unique 1D double chain structures, while 3 with an [InO6N2] square antiprism as a SBU indicates a 2D sql network. Additionally, MOFs 1 and 2 display low water and chemical stability, whereas 3 reveals excellent water and chemical stability but a low proton conductivity (5.10 × 10-6 S cm-1) at 95 °C and 98% relative humidity.
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