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Sodium-Ion-Modified Zeolitic Imidazolate Framework Glasses

  • Pascal Kolodzeiski
  • , Benjamin M. Gallant
  • , Lennard Richter
  • , Mario Antonio T. Ongkiko
  • , Carlo Franke
  • , Aleksander Kostka
  • , Wen-Long Xue
  • , Chinmoy Das
  • , Jan-Benedikt Weiß
  • , Elena Kolodzeiski
  • , Thomas Kress
  • , Gregor Kieslich
  • , Tong Li
  • , Andrew J. Morris
  • , Dominik Kubicki
  • , Sebastian Henke*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Working paper/PreprintPreprint

Abstract

Modifying glass compositions is key to creating silicate-based glasses for technologies like optical fibres, catalytic supports, protective coatings, and separation membranes. Here, we extend this concept to metal-organic framework (MOF) glasses by modifying the MOF glass former ZIF-62 (Zn(im)1.8(bim)0.2, im– = imidazolate, bim– = benzimidazolate) with Na(bim) as a compatible glass modifier. Melt-quenching of physical mixtures with varying Na(bim) content (x Na(bim) · Zn(im)1.8(bim)0.2, 0 < x < 1.5) produces modified MOF glasses with a systematic decrease in the glass transition temperature (Tg), and increased liquid fragility, configurational heat capacity (∆C_V) at Tg, and density as x increases – paralleling the chemistry in silicate glasses due to partial network depolymerisation. Structural and spectroscopic analysis, coupled with density-functional theory calculations, confirm that Na(bim) is incorporated homogeneously into the MOF glass network rather than in the MOF pores and reveal the presence of undercoordinated sodium ion environments. Finally, extraction of the modifier by water treatment increases glass porosity, akin to established borosilicate glass processes. Thereby we introduce a transferable approach for tailoring the structure and properties of MOF glasses, expanding possibilities for these functional glass materials.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherChemRxiv
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Metal-organic frameworks
  • Glasses
  • Glass modification
  • Porous materials
  • Thermal analysis

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