Enhanced Mechanical Stability and Proton Conductivity Performance from the Dense Mn(II)-Metal-Organic Framework to Porous Mn(II)-Fe(III)-Metal-Organic Framework

Inorg Chem. 2022 Sep 26;61(38):15166-15174. doi: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c02357. Epub 2022 Sep 9.

Abstract

Postsynthetic modification (PSM) of the metal-organic framework (MOF) has been demonstrated to be an effective strategy to enhance performance. In this particular work, the anion framework Mn-MOF {[Mn3O(H2O)3(HTC)]2-} (HTC6- = (5'-(3,5-dicarboxyphenyl)-[1,1':3',1″-terphenyl]-3,3″,5,5″-tetracarboxylate] was obtained, and NH2(CH3)2+ ions were filled within the pores to balance the charge. In order to release the internal pores of Mn-MOF, the trivalent Fe(III) was introduced instead of Mn(II) nodes, resulting in the porous Mn1-xFex-MOF, and the NH2(CH3)2+ ions were simultaneously deported from the pores. The content of Fe(III) in Mn1-xFex-MOF was highly dependent on the concentration of Fe(III) solution, and the maximum could be up to Mn0.05Fe0.95-MOF with a BET surface area of 1209.457 m2 g-1. Compared to the amorphization of dense Mn-MOF at 0.8 GPa in a diamond anvil cell, the mechanical stability of porous Mn0.05Fe0.95-MOF has been dramatically enhanced, and the framework integrity could be maintained up to 16.5 GPa. The proton conductivity for the Mn1-xFex-MOF series was also investigated, where Mn0.93Fe0.07-MOF showed the best performance of 1.47 × 10-2 S cm-1 under 70 °C and 98% RH due to the onset of reversed charge from the anionic framework to cationic framework and the formation of the most compact hydrogen bonding net. This work has not only provided an example for the PSM strategy but also illustrated that the versatile functionalities of MOF materials were mainly ascribed to the tunable porosity.