Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are crystalline, 2‐ and 3‐dimensional coordination polymers formed by bonding interactions between metals and multitopic organic ligands. These are typically formed using hard Lewis basic organic ligands with high oxidation state metal ions. The use of low‐valent metals as structural elements in MOFs is far less common, despite the widespread use of such metals for catalysis, luminescence, and other applications. This Minireview focuses on recent advances in the field of low‐valent MOFs and offers a perspective on the future development of these materials.
Coordination assemblies containing transition-metal cations with coordinatively unsaturated sites remain a challenging target in the synthesis of porous molecules. Herein, we report the design, synthesis, and characterization of three porous hybrid inorganic/organic porous molecular assemblies based on cobalt(II) and nickel(II). Precise tuning of ligand functionalization allows for the isolation of molecular species in addition to two-and three-dimensional metal−organic frameworks. The cobaltous and nickelous cage compounds display excellent thermal stabilities in excess of 473 K and Brunauer−Emmett−Teller surface areas on the order of 200 m2/g. The precise ligand functionalization utilized here to control phases between discrete molecules and higher- dimensional solids can potentially further be tuned to optimize the porosity and solubility in future molecular systems.
Organic ligands are critical in determining the physiochemical properties of inorganic nanocrystals. However, precise nanocrystal surface modification is extremely difficult to achieve. Most research focuses on finding ligands that fully passivate the nanocrystal surface, with an emphasis on the supramolecular structure generated by the ligand shell. Inspired by molecular metal-coordination complexes, we devised an approach based on ligand anchoring groups that are flanked by encumbering organic substituents and are chemoselective for binding to nanocrystal corner, edge, and facet sites. Through experiment and theory, we affirmed that the surface-ligand steric pressures generated by these organic substituents are significant enough to impede binding to regions of low nanocurvature, such as nanocrystal facets, and to promote binding to regions of high curvature such as nanocrystal edges.
Ru-HKUST-1 (Ru3(btc)2X1.5; btc3– = 1,3,5-benzenetricarboxylate; X– = chloride, acetate, trimesate, hydroxide) has received considerable attention as a result of its structure type, tunability, and the redox-active nature of its constituent metal paddlewheel building units. When compared to other members of the HKUST-1 family, its surface area is typically reported as ∼25% lower than expected. In contrast to this, a related ruthenium-based porous coordination cage, Ru24(tBu-bdc)24Cl12, displays the expected surface area when compared to Cr2+ and Mo2+ analogs. Here, we examine the factors that result in this decreased surface area for the metal–organic framework (MOF). We show that with appropriate solvent exchange and activation conditions, Ru-HKUST-1 can display a BET surface area as high as 1439 m2/g. We utilize a combination of spectroscopic and diffraction techniques to accurately determine the structure of the MOF, which is most accurately described here as Ru3(btc)2(OAc)1.07Cl0.43, as prepared under our conditions. Furthermore, simply treating the sample as air-sensitive upon isolation greatly improved the adsorption selectivities toward unsaturated molecules.
Mixed-metal solid-state framework materials are emerging candidates for advanced applications in catalysis and chemical separations. Traditionally, the syntheses of mixed-metal framework systems rely on postsynthetic ion exchange, metalloligands, or metal-deposition techniques for the incorporation of a second metal within a framework material. However, these methods are often incompatible with the incorporation of low-valent metal centers, which preferentially bind to electronically “soft” ligands according to the tenets of hard/soft acid/base theory. Here we present the electronically differentiated isocyanide/carboxylate heteroditopic linker ligand 1,4-CNArMes2C6H4CO2H (TIBMes2H; TIB = terphenyl isocyanide benzoate; ArMes2 = 2,6-(2,4,6-Me3C6H2)2C6H2), which is capable of selective binding of low-valent metals via the isocyano group and complexation of hard Lewis acidic metals through the carboxylate unit. This heteroditopic ligand also possesses an encumbering m-terphenyl backbone at the isocyanide function to foster coordinative unsaturation. The treatment of TIBMes2H with [Cu(NCMe)4]PF6 in a 3:1 ratio results in preferential binding of the isocyanide group to the Cu(I) center as assayed by multinuclear NMR and IR spectroscopies. IR spectroscopy also provides strong evidence for the formation of a copper(I) tris(isocyanide) complex, wherein the carboxylic acid group remains unperturbed. The addition of TIBMes2 to [Cu(NCMe)4]PF6 in a 4:1 ratio results in crystallization of the hydrogen-bonding network, [Cu(TIBMes2H)4]PF6, in which the formation of R2 2(8) hydrogen bonds results in a 7-fold interpenetrated diamondoid lattice structure. The preassembly of a copper(I) tris(isocyanide) complex using TIBMes2H, followed by deprotonation and the introduction of ZnCl2, generates a novel and unusual zwitterionic solid-state phase (denoted as Cu/Zn-ISOCN-5; ISOCN = isocyanide coordination network) consisting of a coordinatively unsaturated [Cu(CNR)3]+ cationic secondary building unit (SBU) and an anionic, paddlewheel-type Zn(II)-based SBU of the formulation [Cl2Zn2(O2CR)3]−. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry analysis provided firm evidence for a 2:1 Zn-to-Cu ratio in the network, thereby indicating that the isocyanide and carboxylate groups selectively bind soft and hard Lewis acidic metal centers, respectively. The extended structure of Cu/Zn-ISOCN-5 is a densely packed, noninterpenetrated AB-stacked layer network with modest surface area. However, it is thermally robust, and its formation and compositional integrity validate the use of an electronically differentiated linker for the formation of mixed-metal frameworks incorporating low-valent metal centers.
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