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1.
ACS Mater Au ; 4(2): 224-237, 2024 Mar 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38496053

ABSTRACT

Porous liquids (PLs), which are solvent-based systems that contain permanent porosity due to the incorporation of a solid porous host, are of significant interest for the capture of greenhouse gases, including CO2. Type 3 PLs formed by using metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as the nanoporous host provide a high degree of chemical turnability for gas capture. However, pore aperture fluctuation, such as gate-opening in zeolitic imidazole framework (ZIF) MOFs, complicates the ability to keep the MOF pores available for gas adsorption. Therefore, an understanding of the solvent molecular size required to ensure exclusion from MOFs in ZIF-based Type 3 PLs is needed. Through a combined computational and experimental approach, the solvent-pore accessibility of exemplar MOF ZIF-8 was examined. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations identified that the lowest-energy solvent-ZIF interaction occurred at the pore aperture. Experimental density measurements of ZIF-8 dispersed in various-sized solvents showed that ZIF-8 adsorbed solvent molecules up to 2 Å larger than the crystallographic pore aperture. Density analysis of ZIF dispersions was further applied to a series of possible ZIF-based PLs, including ZIF-67, -69, -71(RHO), and -71(SOD), to examine the structure-property relationships governing solvent exclusion, which identified eight new ZIF-based Type 3 PL compositions. Solvent exclusion was driven by pore aperture expansion across all ZIFs, and the degree of expansion, as well as water exclusion, was influenced by ligand functionalization. Using these results, a design principle was formulated to guide the formation of future ZIF-based Type 3 PLs that ensures solvent-free pores and availability for gas adsorption.

2.
J Phys Chem B ; 127(27): 6091-6101, 2023 Jul 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37399503

ABSTRACT

Complementary X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy studies were conducted on several UCl3 concentrations in several chloride salt compositions. The samples were 5% UCl3 in LiCl (S1), 5% UCl3 in KCl (S2), 5% UCl3 in LiCl-KCl eutectic (S3), 5% UCl3 in LiCl-KCl eutectic (S4), 50% UCl3 in KCl (S5), and 20% UCl3 in KCl (S6) molar concentrations. Sample S3 had UCl3 sourced from Idaho National Laboratory (INL), and all other samples were UCl3 sourced from TerraPower. The initial compositions were prepared in an inert and oxygen-free atmosphere. XAFS measurements were performed in the atmosphere at a beamline, and Raman spectroscopy was conducted inside a glovebox. Raman spectra were able to confirm initial UCl3. XAFS and later Raman spectra measured, however, did not correctly match the literature and computational spectra for the prepared UCl3 salt. Rather, the data shows some complex uranium oxychloride phases at room temperature that transition into uranium oxides upon heating. Oxygen pollution due to failure of the sealing mechanism can result in oxidation of the UCl3 salts. The oxychlorides present may be both a function of the unknown O2 exposure concentration, depending on the source of the leak and the salt composition. Evidence of this oxychloride claim and its subsequent decomposition is justified in this work.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(27): 32792-32802, 2023 Jul 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37379160

ABSTRACT

Porous liquids (PLs) based on the zeolitic imidazole framework ZIF-8 are attractive systems for carbon capture since the hydrophobic ZIF framework can be solvated in aqueous solvent systems without porous host degradation. However, solid ZIF-8 is known to degrade when exposed to CO2 in wet environments, and therefore the long-term stability of ZIF-8-based PLs is unknown. Through aging experiments, the long-term stability of a ZIF-8 PL formed using the water, ethylene glycol, and 2-methylimidazole solvent system was systematically examined, and the mechanisms of degradation were elucidated. The PL was found to be stable for several weeks, with no ZIF framework degradation observed after aging in N2 or air. However, for PLs aged in a CO2 atmosphere, formation of a secondary phase occurred within 1 day from the degradation of the ZIF-8 framework. From the computational and structural evaluation of the effects of CO2 on the PL solvent mixture, it was identified that the basic environment of the PL caused ethylene glycol to react with CO2 forming carbonate species. These carbonate species further react within the PL to degrade ZIF-8. The mechanisms governing this process involves a multistep pathway for PL degradation and lays out a long-term evaluation strategy of PLs for carbon capture. Additionally, it clearly demonstrates the need to examine the reactivity and aging properties of all components in these complex PL systems in order to fully assess their stabilities and lifetimes.

4.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(13): 2881-2888, 2023 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36947182

ABSTRACT

Rare-earth terephthalic acid (BDC)-based metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are promising candidate materials for acid gas separation and adsorption from flue gas streams. However, previous simulations have shown that acid gases (H2O, NO2, and SO2) react with the hydroxyl on the BDC linkers to form protonated acid gases as a potential degradation mechanism. Herein, gas-phase computational approaches were used to identify the formation energies of these secondary protonated acid gases across multiple BDC linker molecules. Formation energies for secondary protonated acid gases were evaluated using both density functional theory (DFT) and correlated wave function methods for varying BDC-gas reaction mechanisms. Upon validation of DFT to reproduce wave function calculation results, rotated conformational linkers and chemically functionalized BDC linkers with -OH, -NH2, and -SH were investigated. The calculations show that the rotational conformation affects the molecule stability. Double-functionalized BDC linkers, where two functional groups are substituted onto BDC, showed varied reaction energies depending on whether the functional groups donate or withdraw electrons from the aromatic system. Based on these results, BDC linker design must balance adsorption performance with degradation via linker dehydrogenation for the design of stable MOFs for acid gas separations.

5.
JACS Au ; 2(8): 1889-1898, 2022 Aug 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36032529

ABSTRACT

Rare-earth polynuclear metal-organic frameworks (RE-MOFs) have demonstrated high durability for caustic acid gas adsorption and separation based on gas adsorption to the metal clusters. The metal clusters in the RE-MOFs traditionally contain RE metals bound by µ3-OH groups connected via organic linkers. Recent studies have suggested that these hydroxyl groups could be replaced by fluorine atoms during synthesis that includes a fluorine-containing modulator. Here, a combined modeling and experimental study was undertaken to elucidate the role of metal cluster fluorination on the thermodynamic stability, structure, and gas adsorption properties of RE-MOFs. Through systematic density-functional theory calculations, fluorinated clusters were found to be thermodynamically more stable than hydroxylated clusters by up to 8-16 kJ/mol per atom for 100% fluorination. The extent of fluorination in the metal clusters was validated through a 19F NMR characterization of 2,5-dihydroxyterepthalic acid (Y-DOBDC) MOF synthesized with a fluorine-containing modulator. 19F magic-angle spinning NMR identified two primary peaks in the isotropic chemical shift (δiso) spectra located at -64.2 and -69.6 ppm, matching calculated 19F NMR δiso peaks at -63.0 and -70.0 ppm for fluorinated systems. Calculations also indicate that fluorination of the Y-DOBDC MOF had negligible effects on the acid gas (SO2, NO2, H2O) binding energies, which decreased by only ∼4 kJ/mol for the 100% fluorinated structure relative to the hydroxylated structure. Additionally, fluorination did not change the relative gas binding strengths (SO2 > H2O > NO2). Therefore, for the first time the presence of fluorine in the metal clusters was found to significantly stabilize RE-MOFs without changing their acid-gas adsorption properties.

6.
Chemistry ; 28(58): e202201926, 2022 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35867588

ABSTRACT

Understanding the selectivity of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) to complex acid gas streams will enable their use in industrial applications. Herein, ab initio molecular dynamic simulations (AIMD) were used to simulate ternary gas mixtures (H2 O-NO2 -SO2 ) in rare earth 2,5-dihydroxyterephthalic acid (RE-DOBDC) MOFs. Stronger H2 O gas-metal binding arose from thermal vibrations in the MOF sterically hindering access of SO2 and NO2 molecules to the metal sites. Gas-gas and gas-linker interactions within the MOF framework resulted in the formation of multiple secondary gas species including HONO, HNO2 , NOSO, and HNO3 - . Four gas adsorption sites were identified along with a new de-protonation reaction mechanism not observable through experiment. This study not only provides valuable information on competitive gas binding energies in the MOF, it also provides important chemical insights into transient chemical reactions and mechanisms.

7.
J Phys Chem B ; 126(7): 1539-1550, 2022 Feb 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35138853

ABSTRACT

Understanding the local environment of the metal atoms in salt melts is important for modeling the properties of melts and predicting their behavior and thus helping enable the development of technologies such as molten salt reactors and solar-thermal power systems and new approaches to recycling rare-earth metals. Toward that end, we have developed an in situ approach for measuring the coordination of metals in molten salt coupling X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and Raman spectroscopy. Our approach was demonstrated for two salt mixtures (1.9 and 5 mol % SrCl2 in NaCl, 0.8 and 5 mol % ZrF4 in LiF) at up to 1100 °C. Near-edge (X-ray absorption near-edge structure, XANES) and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectra were measured. The EXAFS response was modeled using ab initio FEFF calculations. Strontium's first shell is observed to be coordinated with chlorine (Sr2+-Cl-) and zirconium's first shell is coordinated by fluorine (Zr4+-F-), both having coordination numbers that decrease with increasing temperature. Multiple zirconium complexes are believed to be present in the melt, which may interfere and distort the EXAFS spectra and result in an anomalously low zirconium first shell coordination number. The use of boron nitride (BN) powder as a salt diluent for XAFS measurements was found to not interfere with measurements and thus can be used for investigations of such systems.

8.
Molecules ; 27(1)2022 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35011512

ABSTRACT

The solvothermal synthesis, structure determination and optical characterization of five new metastable halometallate compounds, [1,10-phenH][Pb3.5I8] (1), [1,10-phenH2][Pb5I12]·(H2O) (2), [1,10-phen][Pb2I4] (3), [1,10-phen]2[Pb5Br10] (4) and [1,10-phenH][SbI4]·(H2O) (5), are reported. The materials exhibit rich structural diversity and exhibit structural dimensionalities that include 1D chains, 2D sheets and 3D frameworks. The optical spectra of these materials are consistent with bandgaps ranging from 2.70 to 3.44 eV. We show that the optical behavior depends on the structural dimensionality of the reported materials, which are potential candidates for semiconductor applications.

9.
ACS Omega ; 7(1): 362-371, 2022 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35036706

ABSTRACT

A methodology to estimate the heat of mixing (Δmix H) for salt liquids in unexplored AkCl-AnCl x /LnCl x (Ak = alkali, An = actinide, Ln = lanthanide) systems is developed. It improves upon previous empirical approaches by eliminating the need for arbitrarily choosing the required composition at maximum short-range ordering, the minimum Δmix H prior to performing the estimation, which avoids the intrinsic ambiguity of that approach. This semiempirical method has computationally reproduced the behavior of NaCl-UCl3 and KCl-UCl3 systems, providing Δmix H values that agree well with the reported measurements within a propagated two standard deviations (2σ). The capability of the approach is demonstrated in its application to the entirety of the AkCl-UCl3 and AkCl-PuCl3 systems, the results from which have facilitated the accurate thermodynamic modeling of these and other AkCl-AnCl3/LnCl3 systems. The resultant assessed Gibbs energy functions and models have been incorporated in the Molten Salt Thermal Properties Database-Thermochemical (MSTDB-TC).

10.
J Phys Chem A ; 125(13): 2791-2799, 2021 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33764761

ABSTRACT

High-throughput computational studies of lanthanide and actinide chemistry with density-functional theory are complicated by the need for Hubbard U corrections, which ensure localization of the f-electrons, but can lead to metastable states. This work presents a systematic investigation of the effects of both Hubbard U value and metastable states on the predicted structural and thermodynamic properties of four uranium compounds central to the field of nuclear fuels: UC, UN, UO2, and UCl3. We also assess the impact of the exchange-hole dipole moment (XDM) dispersion correction on the computed properties. Overall, the choice of Hubbard U value and inclusion of a dispersion correction cause larger variations in the computed geometric properties than result from metastable states. The weak dependence of structure optimization on metastable states should simplify future high-throughput calculations on actinides. Conversely, addition of the dispersion correction is found to offset the repulsion introduced by the Hubbard U term and provides greatly improved agreement with experiment for both cell volumes and heats of formation. The XDM dispersion correction is largely invariant to the chosen U value, making it a robust dispersion correction for actinide systems.

11.
J Phys Chem A ; 124(45): 9487-9495, 2020 Nov 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33142066

ABSTRACT

Single crystals of four new uranyl titanates have been grown via the flux growth method using mixed alkali halide fluxes. Na2(UO2)(TiO)O3 and KNa(UO2)(TiO)O3 have analogous layered structures containing titanyl (TiO2+) units coordinated into TiO5 square pyramids. Cs2(UO2)TiO4 crystallizes in the Cs2USiO6 structure type and is a rare example of a structure containing TiO4 tetrahedra. Cs2(UO2)Ti2O6 crystallizes in a new tunnel structure and contains the also rare TiO5 trigonal bipyramids. DFT studies were performed to understand the bonding in the observed titanate polyhedra. Furthermore, the luminescence properties of the compounds are reported, and leaching studies are reported for Cs2(UO2)Ti2O6.

12.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 56(66): 9501-9504, 2020 Aug 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32685942

ABSTRACT

The stability of the novel Pu(iv) silicate, Cs2PuSi6O15, was predicted from a combination of crystal chemical reasoning and DFT calculations and confirmed by its synthesis via flux crystal growth. Formation enthalpies of the A2MSi6O15 (A = Na-Cs; M = Ce, Th, U-Pu) compositional family were calculated and indicated the Cs-containing phases should preferentially form in the Cmc21 structure type, consistent with previous experimental findings and the novel phases produced in this work, Cs2PuSi6O15 and Cs2CeSi6O15. The formation enthalpies of a second set of compositions, A2MSi3O9, were also calculated and a comparison between the two compositional families correctly predicted A2MSi6O15 to be on average more stable than A2MSi3O9.

13.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 12(7): 3305-15, 2016 Jul 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27253340

ABSTRACT

The accurate calculation of intermolecular interaction energies with density functional theory requires methods that include a treatment of long-range, nonlocal dispersion correlation. In this work, we explore the ability of the exchange-hole dipole moment (XDM) dispersion correction to model molecular surface adsorption. Adsorption energies are calculated for six small aromatic molecules (benzene, furan, pyridine, thiophene, thiophenol, and benzenediamine) and the four DNA nucleobases (adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine) on the (111) surfaces of the three coinage metals (copper, silver, and gold). For benzene, where the experimental reference data is most precise, the mean absolute error in the computed absorption energies is 0.04 eV. For the other aromatic molecules, the computed binding energies are found to be within 0.09 eV of the available reference data, on average, which is well below the expected experimental uncertainties for temperature-programmed desorption measurements. Unlike other dispersion-corrected functionals, adequate performance does not require changes to the canonical XDM implementation, and the good performance of XDM is explained in terms of the behavior of the exchange hole. Additionally, the base functional employed (B86bPBE) is also optimal for molecular studies, making B86bPBE-XDM an excellent candidate for studying chemistry on material surfaces. Finally, the noncovalent interaction (NCI) plot technique is shown to detect adsorption effects in real space on the order of tenths of an eV.

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