porous materials -metal-organic frameworks

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Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks 2012 Nanocamp NCMN, UNL Dr. Jian Zhang & Jacob Johnson Department of Chemistry

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Page 1: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

2012 Nanocamp NCMN, UNL

Dr. Jian Zhang & Jacob Johnson

Department of Chemistry

Page 2: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

What does a chemist do?

• Chemists observe and study

• Chemists study the composition, assembly, properties, and reactivity of matter (atoms, molecules, materials)

• Chemistry is considered as the central science

Page 3: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Chemistry is the Central Science

Chemistry

Medicine

Environmental Sciences

Astronomy

Biology

Geology

Physics Materials Science

Pharmaceutical

Page 4: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

What does a chemist do?

• Chemists make compounds and materials

– Synthetic chemistry

• Measure properties of materials

– Analytical chemistry

• Model chemical reactions and materials structures

– Theoretical and computational

chemistry

Penicillin

Page 5: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

What does it take to become a chemist?

• Strong interest in science • Strong academic performance • 4+ years of college • Graduate degree (2-4 years)

– Hundreds of graduate schools in the US

• Diverse and rewarding career – Creativity is important – Worldwide industry – Work on important global problems

• Energy • Pollution • Disease

Page 6: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

The Zhang’s Group Research

Metal-organic Frameworks Covalent-organic Frameworks Porous polymer networks

Page 7: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Porous Materials in Nature

Sandstones

Sea Sponge

Butterfly Wings

Egg Shells Snow

Coral Soil Bone Lungs

Lemons

Page 8: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Artificial Porous Materials

Insulation

Cake

Concrete

Bread Ceramics

Chalk Brick Paper

Sponges

Clothing

Page 9: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Pore Type (size)

Micropores (< 2 nm) Mesopores (2-50 nm) Macropores (< 50 nm)

Surface of a chicken egg shell Carbon membrane Monolithic column

Page 10: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Microporous Materials

• A microporous material is a material containing pores with diameters less than 2 nm

• Activated Carbons

• Zeolites

• Metal-organic frameworks

• Covalent organic frameworks

• Microporous polymer

Page 11: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Applications

– Microporous materials • Activated carbons

– The small size of their pores gives them great surface area… they can adsorb a large amount of gas directly on to their surface. Popular support for some catalyst metals (especially palladium and platinum). ρ~ 2g/cm3

• Zeolites – The narrow size distribution of their pores makes them very useful

for gas separation. Also used as catalysts because of acid sites in the pores. ρ~ 4g/cm3

• Metal organic frameworks – Their huge surface area and pore volume makes them potentially

useful for gas sequestration/storage. ρ< 0.5g/cm3

Page 12: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Activated Carbons

Rice Husk Nut Shells

Coconut Fiber Biomass

Made from a variety of materials:

Organic, non-ordered structure

Page 13: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Zeolites – Micropores are part of their crystal structure:

• Most are synthetic

• Alumino-silicates

• Silicalite = no aluminum

• Cation can be H+, Na+, Ca2+, NH4+, etc

• Pore shape needs to be incorporated into pore size calculation for accurate results

• Some adsorbates are better than others

Inorganic, ordered structure

Page 14: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Metal Organic Frameworks MOFs

– Synthetic materials

– Also called coordination polymers

– Similar materials without metals are called COFs… covalent coordination polymers

– Still a very active research area

Inorganic-Organic Hybrid, ordered structure

Page 15: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Metal Organic Frameworks MOFs

Zn4O tetrahedra (blue) are joined by organic linkers (O, red, C, black), giving an extended 3D cubic framework with inter-connected pores of 11.2 Å aperture width and 18.5Å pore (yellow sphere) diameter

Page 16: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Metal Organic Frameworks MOFs

Page 17: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Breathable MOFs

Page 18: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

• Petroleum dependence → U.S. imports 55% of its oil expected to grow to 68% in 2025 • Hydrogen as energy carrier → clean, efficient, and can be derived from domestic resources

Renewable (biomass, hydro, wind, solar, and geothermal)

Fossil fuels (coal ,natural gas, etc.)

Nuclear Energy

Hydrogen storage

Hydrogen Storage in Nano-Porous Materials

Page 19: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

• Hydrogen storage is a critical enabling technology for the acceptance of hydrogen powered vehicles • Storing sufficient hydrogen on board to meet consumers requirements (eg. driving range, cost, safety, and performance) is a crucial technical parameter • No approach currently exists that meets technical requirement. (driving range > 300 miles)

• U.S. DoE → develop on board storage systems achieving 6 and 9 wt% for 2010 and 2015

Hydrogen storage

Hydrogen Storage in Nano-Porous Materials

Page 20: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

Current Challenges with H2 Storage Options

Compressed Hydrogen -High pressure (500-700 atm), -Expensive storage container Liquid Hydrogen -Expensive cooling system required -High energy cost to liquefy H2

Complex and Metal Hydrides -Poor reversibility -Require high temperature and pressure (>100 ˚C and >100 atm)

Page 21: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

MOFs as hydrogen storage materials

~ 3% wt @ 77 K, 1 atm

Page 22: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

CO2 Sequestration

Page 23: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

MOFs as CO2 storage materials

38.5 wt% @ 273 K, 1 atm

Page 24: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

MOF Construction

Organic Linkers Metal Nodes

Mn2+

Page 25: Porous Materials -Metal-Organic Frameworks

109.5° 90° 90°

120°

Tetrahedral Octahedral Trigonal Bipyrimidal

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