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Metal Oxide-Derived MOF-74 Polymer Composites through Pickering Emulsion-Templating: Interfacial Recrystallization, Hierarchical Architectures, and CO(2) Capture Performances

[Image: see text] Currently, metal–organic framework (MOF)–polymer composites are attracting great interest as a step forward in making MOFs a useful material for industrially relevant applications. However, most of the research is engaged with finding promising MOF/polymer pairs and less with the s...

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Autores principales: Vrtovec, Nika, Jurjevec, Sarah, Zabukovec Logar, Nataša, Mazaj, Matjaž, Kovačič, Sebastijan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10103051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36996820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c01796
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author Vrtovec, Nika
Jurjevec, Sarah
Zabukovec Logar, Nataša
Mazaj, Matjaž
Kovačič, Sebastijan
author_facet Vrtovec, Nika
Jurjevec, Sarah
Zabukovec Logar, Nataša
Mazaj, Matjaž
Kovačič, Sebastijan
author_sort Vrtovec, Nika
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Currently, metal–organic framework (MOF)–polymer composites are attracting great interest as a step forward in making MOFs a useful material for industrially relevant applications. However, most of the research is engaged with finding promising MOF/polymer pairs and less with the synthetic methods by which these materials are then combined, albeit hybridization has a significant impact on the properties of the new composite macrostructure. Thus, the focus of this work is on the innovative hybridization of MOFs and polymerized high internal phase emulsions (polyHIPEs), two classes of materials that exhibit porosity at different length scales. The main thrust is the in situ secondary recrystallization, i.e., growth of MOFs from metal oxides previously fixed in polyHIPEs by the Pickering HIPE-templating, and further structure-function study of composites through the CO(2) capture behavior. The combination of Pickering HIPE polymerization and secondary recrystallization at the metal oxide–polymer interface proved advantageous, as MOF-74 isostructures based on different metal cations (M(2+) = Mg, Co, or Zn) could be successfully shaped in the polyHIPEs’ macropores without affecting the properties of the individual components. The successful hybridization resulted in highly porous, co-continuous MOF-74–polyHIPE composite monoliths forming an architectural hierarchy with pronounced macro-microporosity, in which the MOF microporosity is almost completely accessible for gases, i.e., about 87% of the micropores, and the monoliths exhibit excellent mechanical stability. The well-structured porous architecture of the composites showed superior CO(2) capture performance compared to the parent MOF-74 powders. Both adsorption and desorption kinetics are significantly faster for composites. Regeneration by temperature swing adsorption recovers about 88% of the total adsorption capacity of the composite, while it is lower for the parent MOF-74 powders (about 75%). Finally, the composites exhibit about 30% improvement in CO(2) uptake under working conditions compared to the parent MOF-74 powders, and some of the composites are able to retain 99% of the original adsorption capacity after five adsorption/desorption cycles.
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spelling pubmed-101030512023-04-15 Metal Oxide-Derived MOF-74 Polymer Composites through Pickering Emulsion-Templating: Interfacial Recrystallization, Hierarchical Architectures, and CO(2) Capture Performances Vrtovec, Nika Jurjevec, Sarah Zabukovec Logar, Nataša Mazaj, Matjaž Kovačič, Sebastijan ACS Appl Mater Interfaces [Image: see text] Currently, metal–organic framework (MOF)–polymer composites are attracting great interest as a step forward in making MOFs a useful material for industrially relevant applications. However, most of the research is engaged with finding promising MOF/polymer pairs and less with the synthetic methods by which these materials are then combined, albeit hybridization has a significant impact on the properties of the new composite macrostructure. Thus, the focus of this work is on the innovative hybridization of MOFs and polymerized high internal phase emulsions (polyHIPEs), two classes of materials that exhibit porosity at different length scales. The main thrust is the in situ secondary recrystallization, i.e., growth of MOFs from metal oxides previously fixed in polyHIPEs by the Pickering HIPE-templating, and further structure-function study of composites through the CO(2) capture behavior. The combination of Pickering HIPE polymerization and secondary recrystallization at the metal oxide–polymer interface proved advantageous, as MOF-74 isostructures based on different metal cations (M(2+) = Mg, Co, or Zn) could be successfully shaped in the polyHIPEs’ macropores without affecting the properties of the individual components. The successful hybridization resulted in highly porous, co-continuous MOF-74–polyHIPE composite monoliths forming an architectural hierarchy with pronounced macro-microporosity, in which the MOF microporosity is almost completely accessible for gases, i.e., about 87% of the micropores, and the monoliths exhibit excellent mechanical stability. The well-structured porous architecture of the composites showed superior CO(2) capture performance compared to the parent MOF-74 powders. Both adsorption and desorption kinetics are significantly faster for composites. Regeneration by temperature swing adsorption recovers about 88% of the total adsorption capacity of the composite, while it is lower for the parent MOF-74 powders (about 75%). Finally, the composites exhibit about 30% improvement in CO(2) uptake under working conditions compared to the parent MOF-74 powders, and some of the composites are able to retain 99% of the original adsorption capacity after five adsorption/desorption cycles. American Chemical Society 2023-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10103051/ /pubmed/36996820 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c01796 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Vrtovec, Nika
Jurjevec, Sarah
Zabukovec Logar, Nataša
Mazaj, Matjaž
Kovačič, Sebastijan
Metal Oxide-Derived MOF-74 Polymer Composites through Pickering Emulsion-Templating: Interfacial Recrystallization, Hierarchical Architectures, and CO(2) Capture Performances
title Metal Oxide-Derived MOF-74 Polymer Composites through Pickering Emulsion-Templating: Interfacial Recrystallization, Hierarchical Architectures, and CO(2) Capture Performances
title_full Metal Oxide-Derived MOF-74 Polymer Composites through Pickering Emulsion-Templating: Interfacial Recrystallization, Hierarchical Architectures, and CO(2) Capture Performances
title_fullStr Metal Oxide-Derived MOF-74 Polymer Composites through Pickering Emulsion-Templating: Interfacial Recrystallization, Hierarchical Architectures, and CO(2) Capture Performances
title_full_unstemmed Metal Oxide-Derived MOF-74 Polymer Composites through Pickering Emulsion-Templating: Interfacial Recrystallization, Hierarchical Architectures, and CO(2) Capture Performances
title_short Metal Oxide-Derived MOF-74 Polymer Composites through Pickering Emulsion-Templating: Interfacial Recrystallization, Hierarchical Architectures, and CO(2) Capture Performances
title_sort metal oxide-derived mof-74 polymer composites through pickering emulsion-templating: interfacial recrystallization, hierarchical architectures, and co(2) capture performances
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10103051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36996820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c01796
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