L.K. Wang, A. Acovic, et al.
MRS Spring Meeting 1993
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are reticular materials with large pore volume, high surface area, molecular selectivity, and chemical tunability [1]. MOFs stand out as promising solid sorbents for gas separation applications in a sustainability context such as in, for example, CO2 capture and storage. Adsorbates can bind to a MOF either through physisorption [2] or chemisorption mechanisms, where coordinatively unsaturated metal sites within a MOF enable chemical bond formation [3]. Gas adsorption isotherms are typically analyzed for information on the gas uptake and binding energies. However, microscopic insights into the nature of the guest-host interaction are not readily available in these measurements. Raman micro-spectroscopy in combination with ab-initio computational simulations based on density-functional theory (DFT) can potentially provide molecular scale information on adsorbate-adsorbent interaction MOF pores [4,5]. In this contribution, we investigate and adsorption in HKUST-1 and ZnBDC(TED)_{0.5}.$
References
[1] T. Ghanbari et al. Science of The Total Environment 707, 135090 (2020). [2] Nour Nijem et al, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 24, 424203 (2012). [3] N. Li et al., Small 15, 1900426 (2019). [4] K. I. Hadjiivanov et al., Chemical Reviews 121(3), 1286 (2021). [5] M. E. Ferreira et al., arXiv:2411.14644 (2024).