posted on 2023-05-08, 18:03authored byDag Kristian Sannes, Sigurd Øien-Ødegaard, Erlend Aunan, Ainara Nova, Unni Olsbye
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are nanoporous
materials
composed of organic linkers and inorganic nodes. The large variety
of linkers and nodes and the multiple ways to combine them make MOFs
highly tunable materials, which are thoroughly studied for their use
in, e.g., catalysis, gas capture, and separation. The chemistry of
MOFs is further enriched by defects, e.g., missing linker defects,
which provide active sites for catalysis or anchoring sites for introducing
new functionalities. A commonly reported method to quantify linker
defects assumes the presence of one type of linker and the complete
removal of capping agents, solvents, and other impurities upon activation
at high temperature, e.g., 400 °C (M-400). However,
attempts to use this method for MOFs containing different types of
linkers, also called multivariate MOFs (MTV-MOFs), or capping agents
that are not completely removed at 400 °C, give inaccurate results
and hamper comparing results from different publications. In this
work, we have developed a new procedure to compute missing linker
defects in Zr-based MOFs using standard analytical techniques to quantify
the capping agents that remain in the MOF upon activation at 200 °C
(M-200). This method, which has been tested in UiO-66/67
based MOFs, should be applicable to any MOF that (1) has known decomposition
products, (2) has no missing cluster defects, (3) has empty pores
or contain species that can be quantified after activation, and (4)
has a known node composition at 200 °C.