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Abstract
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) hold immense potential for applications from separations to catalysis, yet their long-term behaviour across real-world environments remains unclear. Here we introduce a hierarchical exposure framework that tracks the structural and chemical transformations in the archetypal zirconium MOF UiO-66 across sequential compartments - atmospheric gases, air, aqueous media and a biological host – and resolves how prior exposures condition or prime subsequent transformations. Using synchrotron-based spectroscopy, we find that oxidative gases leave the Zr-carboxylate nodes essentially intact, whereas exposure to environmentally relevant aqueous media initiates partial shifts in local Zr coordination and introduces oxygen into the pores – with transformation extent governed by the chemistry of the environmental matrices. Strikingly, acute exposure (24 h) to the water flea Daphnia magna drives profound framework degradation and re-speciation to a homogeneous biotic Zr species. Microfocus XRF maps show that Zr is highly localized in the animal’s digestive tract, and region-specific XANES confirms uniform speciation across its tissues. Our findings establish a cross-compartment transformation hierarchy in which biological processes can dominate the fate of stable MOFs even when abiotic exposures appear benign. Thus, organism-level biotransformation should be performed as a necessary part of environmental safety assessments and materials design.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Publisher | ChemRxiv |
| Number of pages | 25 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 6 Oct 2025 |
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CompSafeNano: NanoInformatics Approaches for Safe-by-Design NanoMaterials
Valsami-Jones, E. (Co-Investigator) & Lynch, I. (Principal Investigator)
1/09/21 → 31/08/26
Project: EU