Open Access Article
Vitalie
Stavila
*a,
Michael E.
Foster
a,
Jonathan W.
Brown
a,
Ryan W.
Davis
a,
Jane
Edgington
a,
Annabelle I.
Benin
a,
Ryan A.
Zarkesh
a,
Ramakrishnan
Parthasarathi
a,
David W.
Hoyt
b,
Eric D.
Walter
b,
Amity
Andersen
b,
Nancy M.
Washton
b,
Andrew S.
Lipton
b and
Mark D.
Allendorf
*a
aChemistry, Combustion, and Materials Center, Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, California 94551, USA. E-mail: mdallen@sandia.gov; vnstavi@sandia.gov
bEnvironmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington 99354, USA
First published on 3rd September 2019
Metal–Organic Frameworks (MOFs) that catalyze hydrogenolysis reactions are rare and there is little understanding of how the MOF, hydrogen, and substrate molecules interact. In this regard, the isoreticular IRMOF-74 series, two of which are known catalysts for hydrogenolysis of aromatic C–O bonds, provides an unusual opportunity for systematic probing of these reactions. The diameter of the 1D open channels can be varied within a common topology owing to the common secondary building unit (SBU) and controllable length of the hydroxy-carboxylate struts. We show that the first four members of the IRMOF-74(Mg) series are inherently catalytic for aromatic C–O bond hydrogenolysis and that the conversion varies non-monotonically with pore size. These catalysts are recyclable and reusable, retaining their crystallinity and framework structure after the hydrogenolysis reaction. The hydrogenolysis conversion of phenylethylphenyl ether (PPE), benzylphenyl ether (BPE), and diphenyl ether (DPE) varies as PPE > BPE > DPE, consistent with the strength of the C–O bond. Counterintuitively, however, the conversion also follows the trend IRMOF-74(III) > IRMOF-74(IV) > IRMOF-74(II) > IRMOF-74(I), with little variation in the corresponding selectivity. DFT calculations suggest the unexpected behavior is due to much stronger ether and phenol binding to the Mg(II) open metal sites (OMS) of IRMOF-74(III), resulting from a structural distortion that moves the Mg2+ ions toward the interior of the pore. Solid-state 25Mg NMR data indicate that both H2 and ether molecules interact with the Mg(II) OMS and hydrogen–deuterium exchange reactions show that these MOFs activate dihydrogen bonds. The results suggest that both confinement and the presence of reactive metals are essential for achieving the high catalytic activity, but that subtle variations in pore structure can significantly affect the catalysis. Moreover, they challenge the notion that simply increasing MOF pore size within a constant topology will lead to higher conversions.
Development of earth-abundant hydrogenolysis catalysts could improve the economics of hydrogen utilization, particularly if they can replace noble metals and more costly transition metals; a heterogeneous iron catalyst reported very recently is a promising example.15 However, catalysts relying on low-cost main-group elements to activate hydrogen are not common. Although they lack the d orbitals known to polarize H2, light main group elements form metal hydrides, suggesting that thermodynamically favorable hydrogen activation pathways involving these elements could exist. Moreover, alumina and magnesium oxide, which are common supports for hydrogenolysis catalysts, are known to perform an active role in the hydrocracking.7 In nature, mild reaction conditions are achieved by hydrogenase enzymes.26 Their active sites are typically complex Fe–S or Fe–Ni–S clusters that allow electron shuttling and stabilization of protons or hydride ions formed during the reaction.27 Although highly efficient, these catalysts are too thermally sensitive for industrial use, lack synthetic tunability needed to adapt them to specific processes, and often require a base or costly cofactor.
Metal–Organic Frameworks (MOFs) are a recent entry into the catalogue of hydrogenolysis catalysts. These crystalline, nanoporous materials possess a large number of synthetic handles that allow their pore dimensions and reactive site properties to be tailored to catalyze a particular reaction. A particularly significant advantage is the ability to independently control the concentrations of Lewis and Brønsted acid sites, as well as the pore size. The possibilities are clearly evidenced by the rapidly expanding repertoire of reactions catalyzed by MOFs,28 which now includes:29–31 addition reactions such as silylation, sulfurization, and cycloaddition; oxidation; epoxidation; decarbonylation; and condensation. Reports of MOFs catalyzing processes using hydrogen as a reactant are rare, however.32 This is surprising, given the extensive efforts to develop MOFs for hydrogen storage, their well-known high-temperature stability, and reports showing that a number of MOFs are stable in the presence of reducing agents such as metal hydrides.33,34 There are now a few reports in which MOFs serving as supports for transition metal nanoparticles to catalyze hydrodeoxygenation, hydrogenation, and hydrogenolysis,32,35–40 but the MOF itself does not appear to be the agent directly responsible for the hydrogenolysis. In one case, the reaction was conducted in liquid water36 and tandem catalytic behavior has been observed using the metal-loaded MOF.37–40 MOFs were also shown to be effective as precursors for metal alloy catalysts.41,42
Recently, we demonstrated that two frameworks in the IRMOF-74 series,43 IRMOF-74(I)–Mg (Mg2(dobdc); dobdc = 2,5-dioxido-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) and IRMOF-74(II)–Mg (Mg(dobpdc); dobpdc = dobpdc = 4,4′-dihydroxy-[1,1′-biphenyl]-3,3′-dicarboxylate), are intrinsically catalytic for the hydrogenolysis of C–O aryl ether bonds. These MOFs have, respectively, 11.6 Å and 17.7 Å hexagonal channels lined with Mg2+ ions that have unoccupied coordination positions (open metal sites; OMS).44 Very high selectivities were obtained, with ≤1% ring opening and ring hydrogenation observed. Although the conversions were modest (up to 40%) for these MOFs, we found that they can be more than doubled by infiltrating with transition metals known to activate H2. For example, infiltrating IRMOF-74(I)–Mg with TiCl4 increased the conversion of phenylethyl phenyl ether (PPE) to ethylbenzene and phenol from 12% to 51%. Similarly, infiltrating with Ni(0) (in the form of an organometallic) increased the conversion even further (to 68%) with no loss of selectivity in either case. This is consistent with our prior report that doping NaAlH4-infiltrated IRMOF-74(I) with a titanium halide activates H2, enabling the material to reversibly release H2 for hydrogen storage purposes.34 We also found that conversions for three different aromatic ethers, phenylethyl phenyl ether (PPE), benzylphenyl ether (BPE), and diphenyl ether (DPE), were higher using IRMOF-74(II)–Mg, regardless of whether the material was doped with TiClx or Ni(0), supporting the hypothesis that the reaction occurs within the pores, rather than on the surface of the MOF crystals, as has been observed with some other MOF catalysts.29,45 It is logical to expect that hydrogenolysis of these ether molecules will increase with increasing MOF pore diameter if mass transport is rate limiting; however, selectivities should be largely unaffected, unless the pore walls interact with both sides of these relatively flat molecules.
The results of our earlier investigations provided a basis for speculation concerning the precise role of the MOF in catalyzing the hydrogenolysis. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations we performed suggest that the unsaturated coordination sphere of the Mg(II) ions in the activated framework plays an important role in orienting ether molecules within the pore prior to bond cleavage. However, the reason for the higher conversions produced by the catalyst with the larger pores was not determined. Moreover, neither experiments nor modeling clarified whether and how these Mg-based MOFs alone, which lack Pt-group or other transition metals, can activate H2.
Here, we present data from kinetic experiments, H–D exchange reactions, solid-state 25Mg NMR, and density functional theory (DFT) that provide direct insight into the interactions between the catalyst and reaction molecules. In particular, our results indicate that the pores of these MOFs perform several functions during the hydrogenolysis reaction. First, they provide a high density of OMS, in the form of five-coordinate Mg(II) ions (IRMOF-74(I) is the highest known for a MOF). Our data indicate that these bind and orient substrate molecules. Second, these OMS bind to and activate adsorbed H2, as evidenced by H–D exchange reactions. Third, assisting in this process, the MOF pores increase the local concentration of H2 by providing a high surface area to physisorb this weakly interacting gas. Notably, a number of MOFs possess high surface areas and OMS with the ability to adsorb large quantities of H2.46 Our results also shed new light on the role of TiClx and Ni(0) dopants, which increase aryl–ether conversion and accelerate rehydrogenation of metal hydride nanoparticles hosted within the pores of IRMOF-74(1)–Mg.47 Together, these data suggest design rules for MOF hydrogenolysis catalysts. Importantly, however, a non-monotonic change in conversion with pore diameter shows that subtle changes in pore geometry, even within an isoreticular series, can have significant implications for MOF-based catalysis.
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| Scheme 1 Reactions catalyzed by IRMOF-74(I–IV)Mg, with computed gas-phase Gibbs free energies at 393 K (ref. 47). | ||
Hydrogenolysis experiments conducted using these substrates show that the activated forms of all four IRMOF-74(n)Mg variants catalyze the Scheme 1 reactions under the mild conditions we used (120 °C, 10 bar H2; Table 1 and Fig. 1). As the catalyst pore size increases from IRMOF-74(I) to IRMOF-74(III) (Fig. 1), increasing conversion is seen for all three substrates, extending the trend demonstrated previously using only IRMOF-74(I–II)Mg.47 No reaction was observed in the absence of catalyst. As expected, the conversions are also consistent with the strength of the R–OCH5 bond, i.e. DPE < BPE < PPE.
| Entry | Catalyst | Substrate | T, °C | Time, hours | Conv. % | Selectivity | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | ||||||
| 1 | IRMOF-74(I) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 12 | 87 | 91 | ||
| 2 | IRMOF-74(II) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 39 | 83 | 87 | ||
| 3 | IRMOF-74(III) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 44 | 84 | 88 | ||
| 4 | IRMOF-74(IV) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 35 | 88 | 90 | ||
| 5 | Ti@IRMOF-74(I) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 51 | 89 | 90 | ||
| 6 | Ti@IRMOF-74(II) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 60 | 79 | 83 | ||
| 7 | Ti@IRMOF-74(III) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 62 | 85 | 87 | ||
| 8 | Ti@IRMOF-74(IV) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 56 | 84 | 85 | ||
| 9 | Ni@IRMOF-74(I) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 68 | 91 | 94 | ||
| 10 | Ni@IRMOF-74(II) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 82 | 96 | 98 | ||
| 11 | Ni@IRMOF-74(III) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 84 | 94 | 97 | ||
| 12 | Ni@IRMOF-74(IV) | PPE | 120 | 16 | 70 | 93 | 96 | ||
| 13 | IRMOF-74(I) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 10 | 78 | 84 | ||
| 14 | IRMOF-74(II) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 17 | 73 | 78 | ||
| 15 | IRMOF-74(III) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 28 | 76 | 81 | ||
| 16 | IRMOF-74(IV) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 18 | 77 | 83 | ||
| 17 | Ti@IRMOF-74(I) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 33 | 75 | 79 | ||
| 18 | Ti@IRMOF-74(II) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 42 | 84 | 89 | ||
| 19 | Ti@IRMOF-74(III) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 47 | 82 | 85 | ||
| 20 | Ti@IRMOF-74(IV) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 32 | 83 | 85 | ||
| 21 | Ni@IRMOF-74(I) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 57 | 82 | 85 | ||
| 22 | Ni@IRMOF-74(II) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 76 | 91 | 95 | ||
| 23 | Ni@IRMOF-74(III) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 79 | 89 | 92 | ||
| 24 | Ni@IRMOF-74(IV) | BPE | 120 | 16 | 50 | 89 | 90 | ||
| 25 | IRMOF-74(I) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 4 | 79 | 82 | ||
| 26 | IRMOF-74(II) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 9 | 75 | 78 | ||
| 27 | IRMOF-74(III) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 27 | 80 | 83 | ||
| 28 | IRMOF-74(IV) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 12 | 77 | 79 | ||
| 29 | Ti@IRMOF-74(I) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 19 | 81 | 85 | ||
| 30 | Ti@IRMOF-74(II) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 20 | 77 | 80 | ||
| 31 | Ti@IRMOF-74(III) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 27 | 84 | 84 | ||
| 32 | Ti@IRMOF-74(IV) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 22 | 80 | 84 | ||
| 33 | Ni@IRMOF-74(I) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 29 | 80 | 87 | ||
| 34 | Ni@IRMOF-74(II) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 34 | 85 | 87 | ||
| 35 | Ni@IRMOF-74(III) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 51 | 86 | 90 | ||
| 36 | Ni@IRMOF-74(IV) | DPE | 120 | 16 | 31 | 85 | 88 | ||
![]() | ||
| Fig. 1 Conversion of aryl ethers by IRMOF-74 catalysts. Left: activated MOFs. Center: TiClx-infiltrated MOFs. Right: Ni-infiltrated MOFs. | ||
Strikingly, however, when IRMOF-74(IV)Mg is the catalyst the conversion for all three ethers decreases from that obtained for IRMOF-74(III)Mg. The decrease is particularly large for DPE, from 27% conversion for IRMOF-74(III)Mg to only 12% for IRMOF-74(IV)Mg. Assuming that the Mg(II) OMS are the active site for the reaction, one might expect the III → IV conversion to decrease to ∼18% due to the lower volumetric density of OMS as the pore dimensions increase (Table 1). However, this is inconsistent with the non-monotonic trend in the conversion. Moreover, the magnitude of the IRMOF-74(III)Mg → IRMOF-74(IV)Mg decrease is not the same for all three substrates. The IRMOF-74(III)Mg
:
IRMOF-74(IV)Mg conversion ratios are 0.444, 0.643, and 0.795 for DPE, BPE, and PPE, respectively, whereas the IRMOF-74(III)Mg
:
IRMOF-74(IV)Mg ratio of OMS volumetric density is 0.657 (determined from the crystal structures).43 These results are consistent with the reaction occurring with the pores, but more significantly, they suggest that the geometry of the pore is more important than the density of OMS or mass transport in determining the conversion.
The observed selectivities (Table 1) are high in all cases; the small difference in selectivity for the two products of a given reaction (e.g., ethylbenzene and phenol produced by the reaction of PPE) is due to some loss of the more volatile product to the head space of the reaction cell when the hydrogen pressure is released. There is also little variation in the selectivity across the four MOF catalysts. In no case was ring opening observed, as determined by RGA analysis of the head space gases after reaction (Fig. S2†) and the percentage of ring-hydrogenated product (primarily cyclohexanol) is in the low single digits. The uniformity of the selectivities for four different catalysts and three different substrates supports the notion that, once the substrate molecule is adsorbed within the pore, the hydrogenolysis reaction proceeds through a common reaction pathway that is not influenced by the pore size. We note that it is likely that some products and reactant remained in the MOF pores after the supernatant was removed, which will have a small effect on the measured conversions.
Consequently, we sought more direct evidence of H2 activation by using hydrogen–deuterium exchange reactions. We reasoned that free hydrogen radicals are unlikely to exist during the hydrogenolysis reaction, but that the high concentration of H2 in the pores, coupled with the relatively strong interaction with the OMS, should lead to some H–D exchange. To confirm this hypothesis, H2/D2 isotope exchange experiments were performed with IRMOF-74(I)Mg in the presence of p-xylene and PPE at 120 °C. As seen in Fig. 2, formation of HD at m/z 3 is clearly observed from an equimolar H2
:
D2 mixture after a 16 hours reaction in a quartz reactor. A control experiment carried out in p-xylene with PPE but without the MOF showed no HD formation during comparable amounts of time. This indicates that the MOF presence is required for efficient hydrogen–hydrogen bond activation.
Close examination of the 25Mg spectra suggests that the addition of PPE in xylene under 1.5 MPa H2(g) produces changes to the spectrum indicative of new species (in the vicinity of the marker “B” in Fig. S10†). To more clearly identify the spectroscopic signature of individual species within these complex spectra, we calculated 25Mg difference spectra for samples that differ by only one of the reaction components (Fig. 3). The first of these (Fig. 3, left) should reveal features associated with 25Mg interacting with the H2(g) and comprises the difference between the spectra of IRMOF-74(I) with (p-xylene + PPE + H2(g)) and IRMOF-74(I) with only (p-xylene + PPE). Here, the scale was adjusted so that there are no negative-going signals in the difference spectrum. We fit this lineshape to obtain the electric field gradient parameter Cq and asymmetry parameter ηq. The value of Cq obtained (4.79 MHz) is close to that obtained by directly fitting the spectrum in Fig. S8† (4.4 MHz). Similarly, the difference spectrum obtained by subtracting the spectrum of IRMOF-74(I) with (p-xylene + H2(g)) from that of IRMOF-74(I) with (p-xylene + PPE + H2(g)) reveals features associated with 25Mg interacting with PPE (Fig. 3, right). In this case, a smaller value of Cq (3.14) was obtained by fitting the difference spectrum.
These changes to the NMR spectra are distinct, but the nature of the interaction is difficult to determine a priori. Consequently, we employed DFT to compute 25Mg quadrupole couplings and assess whether the spectral assignments derived from the fits to experimental data are consistent with our hypothesized geometries (obtained from DFT-optimized structures of guest-free IRMOF-74(I), H2-loaded IRMOF-74(I), and PPE-loaded IRMOF-74(I); see below). The DFT-predicted values are compared with those obtained from experiment in Table 3. We expect DFT to reproduce Cq trends, but these methods are known to overestimate the magnitude of Cq (note that first principles-predicted values of Cq can be positive or negative, but NMR can only measure the absolute value, which we used for our comparisons).54 Consequently, quantitative comparison with experiment is not justified. Nevertheless, the trends in Cq exhibited by experiment and theory in Table 3 are consistent and the values of ηq are similar, suggesting that the MOF geometries obtained from DFT are reasonable. As an additional check, if we assume a systematic overestimation of Cq by our DFT method (not unreasonable54), multiplying the ratio of Cq(exp.)/Cq(DFT) for the H2 species (4.79/10.69) by the absolute value of the DFT prediction for the PPE species (6.75 MHz) yields a Cq value close to 3.0 MHz, in good agreement with that extracted from experiment (3.1 MHz). Based on the consistency of the combined experimental NMR data, the values of Cq and ηq obtained by fitting these data, and the DFT predictions, we conclude that the NMR data strongly support the hypothesis that both H2 and PPE (and by inference, the other ethers as well) interact directly with the Mg OMS in the MOF structure.
| IRMOF-74(I)Mg | IRMOF-74(II)Mg | IRMOF-74(III)Mg | IRMOF-74(IV)Mg | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DPE | 59.7 | 59.1 | 94.7 | 55.8 |
| BPE | 63.4 | 69.1 | 99.8 | 65.6 |
| PPE | 64.2 | 73.6 | 98.1 | 71.0 |
| Phenol | 63.7 | 75.4 | 117.3 | 69.1 |
| C q (DFT) | η q (DFT) | C q (exp.) | η q (exp.) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRMOF-74(I)Mg | 11.98 | 0.59 | 7.7 | 0.70 |
| IRMOF-74(I)Mg + H2 | 10.69 | 0.64 | 4.8 | 1.00 |
| IRMOF-74(I)Mg + PPE | −6.75 | 0.85 | 3.1 | 1.00 |
![]() | ||
| Fig. 4 A close up of the preferred binding orientation of DPE in IRMOF-74(II), left, and IRMOF-74(III), right. The distance shown correspond to the Mg–O bond length. | ||
First, all four MOFs are intrinsically catalytically active, independent of infiltration with TiCl4 or Ni, and are structurally stable under the reaction conditions. Moreover, pore size influences the conversion of the three ether reactant molecules, all of which are small enough to fit within the pores of these MOFs. The measured selectivities for formation of phenol and C6H5R (R = H, CH3, or C2H5) indicate that the reactions in Scheme 1 occur without ring opening or hydrogenation, consistent with a single reaction channel. A key realization from the DFT modeling is that, although the pores of these MOFs are nominally the same from a topological viewpoint, they are not identical. In particular, the linkers for IRMOF-74(III) and IRMOF-74-(IV) are functionalized with methyl groups to improve solubility. The DFT modeling further suggests that, at least in the case of IRMOF-74(III), these groups affect the catalytic activity. It is important to note that, in contrast to a number of other MOFs, defects in the form of missing linkers or cation vacancies have not been reported for MOF-74.57 In fact, from a structural rigidity and bonding point of view, this is one of the most stable MOFs. Consequently, the catalytic activity should be associated with their expected crystallographic structure.
The 25Mg NMR results indicate that significant changes occur in the coordination environment of Mg(II) upon addition of H2 in the presence of p-xylene and PPE (Fig. 3 and S5–S10†). For as-activated IRMOF-74(I)Mg, the 25Mg NMR spectrum is typical of a second-order quadrupole pattern (Fig. S5†) with electric field gradient parameter Cq of 7.7 and 2.8 MHz, respectively for the ordered and disordered Mg(II) states. Addition of hydrogen gas to IRMOF-74(I) results in the appearance of another species distinct from MOF alone with a Cq value of 5.5 MHz for dry (Fig. S6†) and 4.8 MHz for p-xylene solvated (Fig. 3 and S8†). Since the residence time of H2(g) on the Mg(II) site is fairly short at the experimental temperature (25 °C), it is reasonable to assume that this spectrum is the result of some dynamic or exchange process that is not accounted for in our simulations and might be influenced by the presence of solvent. This new species is due to direct interactions of H2 molecules with the Mg(II) OMS on the MOF, which likely plays a role in activating H2 during the hydrogenolysis process. Similarly, when the solvated MOF is exposed to PPE there is evidence for a direct interaction with the Mg(II) (Fig. 3 and S7†).
The hydrogenolysis reactions in the presence of uninfiltrated MOFs do not go to completion (maximum conversion is ∼45% for PPE/IRMOF-74(III)Mg, Table 1). In general, this could be due to a mass transport limitation, a thermodynamic equilibrium effect, or a kinetic difference resulting from the differing pore structures. In addition, since the reaction occurs in a heterogeneous system with three different phases present (gas, liquid and solid), there are likely multiple processes occurring at simultaneously at different interfaces that may affect the conversion efficiency. We rule out mass transport because the continuous increase in pore size does not lead to corresponding continuous increases in conversion. The pore cross-sectional area increases by factor of ∼9 for IRMOF-74(I)Mg → IRMOF-74(IV)Mg, which should lead to an increase in conversion, or at a minimum, saturation. Since this is counter to observation, we conclude that chemical factors, such as confinement effects, substrate binding energies, and the reaction potential energy surface, are responsible for the non-monotonic conversion trend.
Competition for active sites between the ether substrate and product molecules is an alternative explanation for the incomplete conversions we observe. Confinement of molecules within the pores increases the local concentration and thus reaction inhibition could occur regardless of whether the reaction is near equilibrium or kinetically controlled. The predicted binding energies of phenol (Table 2), a product in each of the reactions (Scheme 1), are either the same (within the uncertainty of the calculations) or larger (for IRMOF-74(III)) than the ether binding energies. This indicates that phenol likely competes with incoming ether molecules for the OMS. To test this hypothesis, we performed hydrogenolysis experiments with PPE and IRMOF-74(I–IV) in the presence of one equivalent of phenol added at the beginning of the reaction. We observe that the PPE conversion efficiency is unchanged for IRMOF-74(I), possibly due to steric constraints imposed by the small pore diameter (1.1 nm). The conversion decreases for the other three MOFs with larger pores (Table S4, ESI†). Notably, the largest decrease in conversion was observed for IRMOF-74(III), which is consistent with the higher phenol binding energy to IRMOF-74(III)Mg compared with the other MOFs (117 kJ mol−1vs. 64–75 kJ mol−1). It is thus apparent that, although product inhibition occurs, this affect cannot alone explain the observed trend in conversion efficiency.
Consequently, we conclude that the observed conversion trends, both with and without additional reaction-inhibiting phenol, are consistent with the computed binding energies (Table 2). In fact, close examination of the data in Table 1 shows that the conversions for IRMOF-74(II) and IRMOF-74(IV) are nearly the same, in agreement with their nearly identical substrate and phenol binding energies. This is in spite of the fact that the pore size of IRMOF-74(IV) is nearly double that of IRMOF-74(II) (Table S1†). As discussed above, the Mg(II)–(ether O) bond distance in IRMOF-74(III) is shorter than in the other three MOFs due to the contracted unit cell. XRD data for the DPE-loaded IRMOF-74(I) and IRMOF(II) catalysts suggest that the unit cell is essentially unchanged upon the infiltration of the MOF with guest ether molecules (Fig. S3†), indicating that a structural distortion upon substrate binding does not occur. Moreover, the predicted ether and phenol binding energies display the same qualitative trend (up–up–down) regardless of substrate, mirroring the conversion trends (Tables 1 and S4†). This leads us to the important conclusion that a common topology within an isoreticular MOF series does not guarantee that differences in chemical behavior will be due only to variations in pore size.
It is also clear that H2 activation must occur for these hydrogenolysis reactions to proceed. The formation of HD under experimental conditions in p-xylene confirms this, a result that is consistent with a large body of data, including neutron diffraction and high-pressure diffuse reflectance IR measurements, showing that H2 binds to the OMS in both IRMOF-74-(I) and IRMOF-74(II).58 The hydrogen isosteric heat of adsorption (Qst) of IRMOF-74-(I) at 298 K is relatively high at 9.4 kJ mol−1.59 Magnesium also forms stable bonds with hydrogen (e.g., MgH2), which provides an additional thermodynamic driving force for H–H bond activation. Infiltration with TiCl4 and Ni nanoparticles provides an additional probe of the H2 activation mechanism. Reduction in H2 prior to reaction with the ethers creates TiCl3 and Ni nanoparticles as seen by XPS, both of which are known to activate H2.47 As a result, conversion increases substantially, as seen in Fig. 1. However, the trend among the four IRMOF-74 catalysts and in the series of the three ethers for a fixed catalyst is similar to that exhibited by the activated MOFs. This indicates that, although TiCl3 and Ni nanoparticles supply additional sites for H2 activation, the factors controlling the conversion are unchanged. It also implies that the OMS binds the ether molecule, possibly with a specific orientation, thereby activating the C6H5O–R bond.
An important remaining issue is the nature of the H2 activation by this MOF. We considered three possible reaction pathways: (1) homolytic H–H bond cleavage, followed by H atom migration via spillover; (2) H2 and ether binding to neighboring OMS, followed by H2 attack on the ether; this could occur either by a concerted process involving an ether–H2 transition state, or via heterolytic H–H bond cleavage followed by reaction of the resulting hydride and proton with the ether molecule; and (3) ether binding to an OMS, followed by H2 binding/attack at the same OMS. Pathway (1) is unlikely, given that the Mg(II) OMS lacks the d orbitals normally involved in homolytic cleavage. However, if homolytic cleavage were to occur, a recent investigation by Karim et al. of hydrogen spillover on nano-patterned oxide substrates demonstrates that H atoms can diffuse long distances across metal oxides.60 They also showed that H atoms formed on Pt can diffuse on an aluminum oxide support as far as 15 nm, albeit inefficiently, which should easily be far enough to encounter an ether molecule.
Regarding pathway (2), in our previous investigation of NaAlH4-infiltrated IRMOF-74-(I)(Mg),34 we estimated that, on average, there was one TiClx molecule for every 50 Mg(II) OMS, giving a distance between Ti atoms of about 3 unit cells in the axial direction (3 × 6.5 Å = ∼20 Å). This light doping was sufficient to make H2 desorption reversible from nanoscale NaAlH4 in the pores. In the present investigation, dopant loadings are significantly higher (>1.5 wt% vs. 0.6 wt% in the earlier study), presumably reducing the diffusion distance required for an activated H2. We estimate that the average separation between TiClx or Ni nanoparticle dopants is at most 8 Å, or about one per unit cell. The shortest distance between Mg(II) OMS in the IRMOF-74(I) structure is ∼5 Å, corresponding to the Mg–O–Mg chain in the continuous helical structure forming the MOF; this is well within the range of hydrogen spillover on Al2O3.60 This suggests that H2 bound to an OMS can react with an ether molecule on a neighboring OMS, either by diffusion from one site to another, or potentially via a concerted mechanism involving a (H2)Mg–O–Mg(ether) transition state. These observations suggest a direction for reaction modeling, in which transition state theory could be applied to evaluate the energetics of the possible ether–H2 binding geometries.
Pathway (3) is the most likely in our estimation. The higher binding energy predicted for the ethers (Table 2) favors this. Moreover, it does not require a more complex, dual-OMS transition state or diffusion of an H atom from one site to another. A recent study of H2 binding to a Mn–S analogue of IRMOF-74-(I) shows that binding of multiple H2 to an OMS is possible.61 The ether substrates used here are obviously much bulkier, raising the question whether there is sufficient space for both the ether and H2 to bind to the same site. This could possibly be resolved by additional DFT calculations, but at a very high level to ensure accurate H2 binding energies, as discussed elsewhere.62
:
1
:
1 (v/v/v) mixture of DMF (80 mL), ethanol (4 mL), and water (4 mL). The homogeneous solution was then transferred to a 150 mL Teflon-lined stainless-steel autoclave. The autoclave was capped tightly and heated to 125 °C in an oven. After 24 hours the autoclave was removed from the oven and a yellow microcrystalline material was recovered and washed with 10 mL DMF. The product was then soaked in 20 mL DMF and heated to 80 °C for 4 hours. The solvent was carefully decanted from the product and replaced with 20 mL anhydrous methanol and stirred for 2 hours. Fresh methanol was used for solvent exchange for four more times. The yellow precipitate was isolated by filtration and washed thoroughly with methanol. The MOF was activated under a dynamic vacuum at 195 °C for 16 hours, yielding a yellow crystalline material.
418
704 Å). Experiments were conducted in continuous scanning mode with the goniometer in the theta-2theta orientation. Incident beam optics included a 1/16° divergence slit and a 1/8° anti-scatter slit, as well as a 10 mm fixed incident beam mask and a Soller slit (0.04 rad). Divergent beam optics included a P7.5 anti-scatter slit, a Soller slit (0.04 rad), and a Ni K-beta filter. Inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) analysis was performed by ALS Environmental, Inc. Surface area measurements (Brunauer, Emmett and Teller (BET) method) were determined using a Micromeritics ASAP 2020 porosimeter.
The principal observable in a solid-state NMR experiment on a quadrupolar nuclide is the quadrupole coupling constant, Cq.68 The experimental NMR spectrum is dominated by the quadrupolar Hamiltonian and the lineshape of the observed central transition (±1/2) is broadened by the quadrupolar interaction to second-order. This quadrupolar lineshape is proportional to:
![]() | (1) |
In other words, the width of the lineshape is proportional to the square of Cq and inversely proportional to the Larmor frequency, ω0, of the nucleus in question. This field dependence is an essential tool in the disentanglement of quadrupolar lineshapes. The coupling constant is directly proportional to the electric field gradient at the nuclide of interest and is given by:
![]() | (2) |
| = qzz × 46.852 MHz (for 25Mg) | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
The units for qzz as expressed in eqn (2) are atomic units and the factor of 46.852 MHz can be computed if the atomic constants (e, a0, and h have their usual meanings) are expressed in cgs units and the value of Q is given as 0.1994 × 10−24 cm2.70 The experimentally derived quadrupole coupling constant can therefore be compared to that predicted by an ab initio molecular orbital calculation.
DFT electric field gradient (EFG) calculations were performed to calculate the 25Mg quadrupolar coupling constant (Cq) and asymmetry parameter (ηq) using the Quantum Espresso electronic structure software.77 The rVV10 functional,78 which accounts for van der Waals effects, and projector-augmented-wave (PAW) pseudopotentials were employed.79,80 A 60 Ry plane-wave energy cutoff and a 400 Ry density cutoff were used in all calculations. The gauge-including projector-augmented-wave (GIPAW)81 software in Quantum Espresso was used to calculate the EFG of the magnesium nuclei.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c9sc01018a |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 |