Beyond vacancy defects: creation of coordinatively modulated defective sites in HKUST-1 for unprecedented enhancement of peroxymonosulfate activation
Abstract
By pioneering coordinative modulation in defective metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), a transformative leap in catalytic efficiency was achieved in this work, surpassing conventional vacancy-based designs. Coordinatively modulated (CM) Cu–NH2 sites are created in Cu3(BTC)2 (HKUST-1, H3BTC is 1,3,5-benzene tricarboxylic acid) via functionalization of missing carboxylate defective sites. For this, a secondary carboxylate linker is used so that one carboxylate is replaced with –NH2 groups. Structural characterization studies reveal that amine groups are directly oriented toward inorganic nodes and coordinated to Cu-sites in the framework to generate CM-Cu–NH2 sites. Tritopic BTC3− linkers inside HKUST-1 were partially replaced with secondary linkers with the same molecular geometry, 5-amino isophthalic acid (5-AIPA), and isophthalic acid (IPA). Coordinatively modulated frameworks with different ratios of CM-Cu–NH2 sites were applied for activation of peroxymonosulfate (PMS) as a proof-of-concept reaction with a complex mechanism based on Lewis acidity and redox activity. The HN-50 framework (Cu2.167IICu0.833I(BTC)1.123(5-AIPA)0.472), with the highest ratio of CM-Cu–NH2 and defective sites, achieves >99% pollutant degradation in 5 minutes via peroxymonosulfate activation—a 65-fold kinetic enhancement over HKUST-1, driven by enhanced Cu electrophilicity and electron transfer, as revealed by experimental and DFT studies. Experimental studies, as evidenced by theoretical simulations, reveal that two structural changes are observed in the presence of amines; (i) charge redistribution on CM-Cu–NH2 sites through increases in the density of positive charge on Cu atoms, and (ii) improved electron transfer kinetics through electronic delocalization facilitated by the coordination environment of the CM-Cu–NH2 sites. These two structural factors are dominant for the highly efficient PMS activation by improving MOF-PMS affinity and MOF-to-PMS electron transfer. The strategy of this work reveals how defect engineering in HKUST-1 can tune the electronic structure of Cu active sites and promote Cu(II)/Cu(I) redox cycling for PMS activation, redefining MOF catalyst design.

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