posted on 2017-08-24, 00:00authored byYang Ming, Nitin Kumar, Donald J. Siegel
The high surface areas and tunable
properties of metal–organic
frameworks (MOFs) make them attractive materials for applications
in catalysis and the capture, storage, and separation of gases. Nevertheless,
the limited stability of some MOFs under humid conditions remains
a point of concern. Understanding the atomic-scale mechanisms associated
with MOF hydrolysis will aid in the design of new compounds that are
stable against water and other reactive species. Toward revealing
these mechanisms, the present study employs van der Waals-augmented
density functional theory, transition-state finding techniques, and
thermodynamic integration to predict the thermodynamics and kinetics
of water adsorption/insertion into the prototype compound, MOF-5.
Adsorption and insertion energetics were evaluated as a function of
water coverage, while accounting for the full periodicity of the MOF-5
crystal structure, that is, without resorting to cluster approximations
or structural simplifications. The calculations suggest that the thermodynamics
of MOF hydrolysis are coverage-dependent: water insertion into the
framework becomes exothermic only after a sufficient number of H2O molecules are coadsorbed in close proximity on a Zn–O
cluster. Above this coverage threshold, the adsorbed water clusters
facilitate facile water insertion via breaking of Zn–O bonds:
the calculated free-energy barrier for insertion is very low, 0.17
eV at 0 K and 0.04 eV at 300 K. Our calculations provide a highly
realistic description of the mechanisms underlying the hydrolysis
of MOFs under humid working conditions.