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The Role of Temperature and Adsorbate on Negative Gas Adsorption in the Mesoporous Metal-Organic Framework DUT-49

Authors :
Senkovska, Irene
Krause, Simon
Evans, Jack
Bon, Volodymyr
Senkovska, Irena
Coudert, François-Xavier
Többens, Daniel
Wallacher, Dirk
Grimm, Nico
Kaskel, Stefan
Technische Universität Dresden = Dresden University of Technology (TU Dresden)
Stratingh Institute for Chemistry
University of Groningen [Groningen]
Institut de Recherche de Chimie Paris (IRCP)
Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Chimie de Paris - Chimie ParisTech-PSL (ENSCP)
Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Ministère de la Culture (MC)
Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie GmbH (HZB)
Source :
Faraday Discussions, Faraday Discussions, Royal Society of Chemistry, 2021, 225, pp.168-183. ⟨10.1039/D0FD00013B⟩
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2021.

Abstract

International audience; Unusual adsorption phenomena, such as breathing and negative gas adsorption (NGA), are rare and challenge our thermodynamic understanding of adsorption in deformable porous solids. In particular, NGA appears to break the rules of thermodynamics in these materials by exhibiting a spontaneous release of gas accompanying an increase in pressure. This anomaly relies on long-lived metastable states. A fundamental understanding of this process is desperately required for the discovery of new materials with this exotic property. Interestingly, NGA was initially observed upon adsorption of methane at relatively low temperature, close to the respective standard boiling point of the adsorptive, and no NGA was observed at elevated temperatures. In this contribution, we present an extensive investigation of adsorption of an array of gases at various temperatures on DUT-49, a material which features an NGA transition. Experiments, featuring a wide range of gases and vapors at temperatures ranging from 21–308 K, were used to identify for each guest a critical temperature range in which NGA can be detected. The experimental results were complemented by molecular simulations that help to rationalize the absence of NGA at elevated temperatures, and the non-monotonic behavior present upon temperature decrease. Furthermore, this in-depth analysis highlights the crucial thermodynamic and kinetic conditions for NGA, which are unique to each guest and potentially other solids with similar effects. We expect this exploration to provide detailed guidelines for experimentally discovering NGA and related “rule breaking” phenomena in novel and already known materials, and provide the conditions required for the application of this effect, for example as pressure amplifying materials.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13596640 and 13645498
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Faraday Discussions, Faraday Discussions, Royal Society of Chemistry, 2021, 225, pp.168-183. ⟨10.1039/D0FD00013B⟩
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..353ce800b834336ec672502e9b16f523