Hierarchical ZIF-8 Materials via Acid Gas-Induced Defect Sites: Synthesis, Characterization, and Functional Properties

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2023 Aug 30;15(34):40623-40632. doi: 10.1021/acsami.3c08344. Epub 2023 Aug 18.

Abstract

Microporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have been widely studied for molecular separation and catalysis. The uniform micropores of MOFs (<2 nm) can introduce diffusion limitations and render the interiors of the crystal inaccessible to target molecules. The introduction of hierarchical porosity (interconnected micro and mesopores) can enhance intra-crystalline diffusion while maintaining the separation/catalytic selectivity. Conventional hierarchical MOF synthesis involves complex strategies such as elongated linkers, soft templating, and sacrificial templates. Here, we demonstrate a more general approach using our controlled acid gas-enabled degradation and reconstruction (Solvent-Assisted Crystal Redemption) strategy. Selective linker labilization of ZIF-8 is shown to generate a hierarchical pore structure with mesoporous cages (∼50 nm) while maintaining microporosity. Detailed structural and spectroscopic characterization of the controlled degradation, linker insertion, and subsequent linker thermolysis is presented to show the clustering of acid gas-induced defects and the generation of mesopores. These findings indicate the generality of controlled degradation and reconstruction as a means for linker insertion in a wider variety of MOFs and creating hierarchical porosity. Enhanced molecular diffusion and catalytic activity in the hierarchical ZIF-8 are demonstrated by the adsorption kinetics of 1-butanol and a Knoevenagel condensation reaction.

Keywords: Knoevenagel; MOFs; acid gas; defects; hierarchical.