posted on 2024-10-09, 12:33authored byGiulio Bresciani, Massimo Guelfi, Melodj Dosa, Virginia Guiotto, Valentina Crocellà, Marco Lessi, Marco Taddei
The design of the organic linker is one of the most important
steps
in driving the formation of the desired crystal structure in coordination
polymers. Imidazole derivatives exhibit wide and interesting coordination
capabilities. This property makes these π-conjugated ligands
suitable linkers in the synthesis of metal–organic frameworks
(MOFs). Despite these considerations, few examples of two-dimensional
(2D) materials based on the 1,4-bis(1H-imidazol-1-yl)benzene
(bib) ligand, which can be seen as a topological analogue
of 4,4′-bipyridine, have been reported so far, and there is
a lack of literature on the exploration of their gas adsorption properties.
The combination of bib ligand with Cu(BF4)2 led us to obtain a doubly interpenetrated three-dimensional
(3D) material (UdP-1) of minimal formula [Cu(bib)2.5(BF4)]·(BF4)·1.5H2O that loses 0.5 equiv of bib upon heating and
undergoes a phase transition to a new material named UdP-2. UdP-2 was obtained as a microcrystalline powder by
direct synthesis, but its crystal structure could not be elucidated.
Attempts to obtain single crystals of UdP-2 led us to
discover four new compounds, named UdP-3, UdP-3-i, UdP-4, and UdP-5, displaying both 2D
and 3D structures. Using Cu(CF3SO3)2 instead of Cu(BF4)2 allowed us to prepare
a 2D layered material of the formula [Cu(bib)2(CF3SO3)2]·2MeOH (UdP-6), where the methanol molecules are trapped in the pores of the structure
as in the ELM-12 structure, which contains 4,4′-bipyridine
as the organic ligand. Different from ELM-12, UdP-6 displays
a Type I CO2 adsorption isotherm, with no evidence of a
gating phenomenon. This behavior is attributed to the larger number
of supramolecular interactions existing between adjacent layers in UdP-6.