Adsorption Dynamics of Gases and Vapors on the Nanoporous Metal Organic Framework Material Ni2(4,4‘-Bipyridine)3(NO3)4: Guest Modification of Host Sorption Behavior
- 21 September 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Vol. 123 (41), 10001-10011
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja0109895
Abstract
This study combines measurements of the thermodynamics and kinetics of guest sorption with powder X-ray diffraction measurements of the nanoporous metal organic framework adsorbent (host) at different adsorptive (guest) loadings. The adsorption characteristics of nitrogen, argon, carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide and ethanol and methanol vapors on Ni2(4,4‘-bipyridine)3(NO3)4 were studied over a range of temperatures as a function of pressure. Isotherm steps were observed for both carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide adsorption at ∼10−20% of the total pore volume and at ∼70% of total pore volume for methanol adsorption. The adsorption kinetics obey a linear driving force (LDF) mass transfer model for adsorption at low surface coverage. At high surface coverage, both methanol and ethanol adsorption follow a combined barrier resistance/diffusion model. The rates of adsorption in the region of both the carbon dioxide and methanol isotherm steps were significantly slower than those observed either before or after the step. X-ray diffraction studies at various methanol loadings showed that the host structure disordered initially but underwent a structural change in the region of the isotherm step. These isotherm steps are ascribed to discrete structural changes in the host adsorbent that are induced by adsorption on different sites. Isotherm steps were not observed for ethanol adsorption, which followed a Langmuir isotherm. Previous X-ray crystallography studies have shown that all the sites are equivalent for ethanol adsorption on Ni2(4,4‘-bipyridine)3(NO3)4, with the host structure undergoing a scissoring motion and the space group remaining unchanged during adsorption. The activation energies and preexponential factors for methanol and ethanol adsorption were calculated for each pressure increment at which the linear driving force model was obeyed. There was a good correlation between activation energy and ln(preexponential factor), indicating a compensation effect. The results are discussed in terms of reversible adsorbate/adsorbent (guest/host) structural changes and interactions and the adsorption mechanism. The paper contains the first evidence of specific interactions between guests and functional groups leading to structural change in flexible porous coordination polymer frameworks.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Coexisting covalent and non-covalent planar networks in the crystal structures of {[M(bipy)2(NO3)2]·arene}n (M = Ni, 1; Co, 2; arene = chlorobenzene, o-dichlorobenzene, benzene, nitrobenzene, toluene or anisole) †J. Chem. Soc., Dalton Trans., 2000
- Molecular Level Models for CO2 Sorption in NanoporesLangmuir, 1999
- From Condensed Lanthanide Coordination Solids to Microporous Frameworks Having Accessible Metal SitesJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1999
- Zeolite-like crystal structure of an empty microporous molecular frameworkChemical Communications, 1999
- Crystal structure of the coordination polymer [Co(bipy)1.5(NO3)2]·CS2 (bipy=4,4′-bipyridine), a new motif for a network sustained by ‘T-shape’ building blocksNew Journal of Chemistry, 1998
- A Molecular Railroad with Large Pores: Synthesis and Structure of Ni(4,4‘-bpy)2.5(H2O)2(ClO4)2·1.5(4,4‘-bpy)·2H2OInorganic Chemistry, 1997
- Rate and equilibrium sorption parameters for nitrogen and methane on carbon molecular sieveGas Separation & Purification, 1993
- The compensation effect: A fact or a fictionJournal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry, 1989
- Surface DiffusionCatalysis Reviews, 1989
- Adsorption capacity of molecular sieve type carbonsLangmuir, 1987