Allison L. Dzubak
University of Minnesota
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Featured researches published by Allison L. Dzubak.
Nature | 2015
Thomas M. McDonald; Jarad A. Mason; Xueqian Kong; Eric D. Bloch; David Gygi; Alessandro Dani; Valentina Crocellà; Filippo Giordanino; Samuel O. Odoh; Walter S. Drisdell; Bess Vlaisavljevich; Allison L. Dzubak; Roberta Poloni; Sondre K. Schnell; Nora Planas; Kyuho Lee; Tod A. Pascal; Liwen F. Wan; David Prendergast; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Berend Smit; J. B. Kortright; Laura Gagliardi; Silvia Bordiga; Jeffrey A. Reimer; Jeffrey R. Long
The process of carbon capture and sequestration has been proposed as a method of mitigating the build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. If implemented, the cost of electricity generated by a fossil fuel-burning power plant would rise substantially, owing to the expense of removing CO2 from the effluent stream. There is therefore an urgent need for more efficient gas separation technologies, such as those potentially offered by advanced solid adsorbents. Here we show that diamine-appended metal-organic frameworks can behave as ‘phase-change’ adsorbents, with unusual step-shaped CO2 adsorption isotherms that shift markedly with temperature. Results from spectroscopic, diffraction and computational studies show that the origin of the sharp adsorption step is an unprecedented cooperative process in which, above a metal-dependent threshold pressure, CO2 molecules insert into metal-amine bonds, inducing a reorganization of the amines into well-ordered chains of ammonium carbamate. As a consequence, large CO2 separation capacities can be achieved with small temperature swings, and regeneration energies appreciably lower than achievable with state-of-the-art aqueous amine solutions become feasible. The results provide a mechanistic framework for designing highly efficient adsorbents for removing CO2 from various gas mixtures, and yield insights into the conservation of Mg2+ within the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase family of enzymes.
Nature Chemistry | 2014
Dianne J. Xiao; Eric D. Bloch; Jarad A. Mason; Wendy L. Queen; Matthew R. Hudson; Nora Planas; Joshua Borycz; Allison L. Dzubak; Pragya Verma; Kyuho Lee; Francesca Bonino; Valentina Crocellà; Junko Yano; Silvia Bordiga; Donald G. Truhlar; Laura Gagliardi; Craig M. Brown; Jeffrey R. Long
Enzymatic haem and non-haem high-valent iron-oxo species are known to activate strong C-H bonds, yet duplicating this reactivity in a synthetic system remains a formidable challenge. Although instability of the terminal iron-oxo moiety is perhaps the foremost obstacle, steric and electronic factors also limit the activity of previously reported mononuclear iron(IV)-oxo compounds. In particular, although natures non-haem iron(IV)-oxo compounds possess high-spin S = 2 ground states, this electronic configuration has proved difficult to achieve in a molecular species. These challenges may be mitigated within metal-organic frameworks that feature site-isolated iron centres in a constrained, weak-field ligand environment. Here, we show that the metal-organic framework Fe2(dobdc) (dobdc(4-) = 2,5-dioxido-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) and its magnesium-diluted analogue, Fe0.1Mg1.9(dobdc), are able to activate the C-H bonds of ethane and convert it into ethanol and acetaldehyde using nitrous oxide as the terminal oxidant. Electronic structure calculations indicate that the active oxidant is likely to be a high-spin S = 2 iron(IV)-oxo species.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Eric D. Bloch; Matthew R. Hudson; Jarad A. Mason; Sachin Chavan; Valentina Crocellà; Joshua D. Howe; Kyuho Lee; Allison L. Dzubak; Wendy L. Queen; Joseph M. Zadrozny; Stephen J. Geier; Li-Chiang Lin; Laura Gagliardi; Berend Smit; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Silvia Bordiga; Craig M. Brown; Jeffrey R. Long
Six metal-organic frameworks of the M2(dobdc) (M = Mg, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Zn; dobdc(4-) = 2,5-dioxido-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) structure type are demonstrated to bind carbon monoxide reversibly and at high capacity. Infrared spectra indicate that, upon coordination of CO to the divalent metal cations lining the pores within these frameworks, the C-O stretching frequency is blue-shifted, consistent with nonclassical metal-CO interactions. Structure determinations reveal M-CO distances ranging from 2.09(2) Å for M = Ni to 2.49(1) Å for M = Zn and M-C-O angles ranging from 161.2(7)° for M = Mg to 176.9(6)° for M = Fe. Electronic structure calculations employing density functional theory (DFT) resulted in good agreement with the trends apparent in the infrared spectra and crystal structures. These results represent the first crystallographically characterized magnesium and zinc carbonyl compounds and the first high-spin manganese(II), iron(II), cobalt(II), and nickel(II) carbonyl species. Adsorption isotherms indicate reversible adsorption, with capacities for the Fe, Co, and Ni frameworks approaching one CO per metal cation site at 1 bar, corresponding to loadings as high as 6.0 mmol/g and 157 cm(3)/cm(3). The six frameworks display (negative) isosteric heats of CO adsorption ranging from 52.7 to 27.2 kJ/mol along the series Ni > Co > Fe > Mg > Mn > Zn, following the Irving-Williams stability order. The reversible CO binding suggests that these frameworks may be of utility for the separation of CO from various industrial gas mixtures, including CO/H2 and CO/N2. Selectivities determined from gas adsorption isotherm data using ideal adsorbed solution theory (IAST) over a range of gas compositions at 1 bar and 298 K indicate that all six M2(dobdc) frameworks could potentially be used as solid adsorbents to replace current cryogenic distillation technologies, with the choice of M dictating adsorbent regeneration energy and the level of purity of the resulting gases.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Kyuho Lee; William C. Isley; Allison L. Dzubak; Pragya Verma; Samuel J. Stoneburner; Li-Chiang Lin; Joshua D. Howe; Eric D. Bloch; Douglas A. Reed; Matthew R. Hudson; Craig M. Brown; Jeffrey R. Long; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Berend Smit; Christopher J. Cramer; Donald G. Truhlar; Laura Gagliardi
Gas separations with porous materials are economically important and provide a unique challenge to fundamental materials design, as adsorbent properties can be altered to achieve selective gas adsorption. Metal-organic frameworks represent a rapidly expanding new class of porous adsorbents with a large range of possibilities for designing materials with desired functionalities. Given the large number of possible framework structures, quantum mechanical computations can provide useful guidance in prioritizing the synthesis of the most useful materials for a given application. Here, we show that such calculations can predict a new metal-organic framework of potential utility for separation of dinitrogen from methane, a particularly challenging separation of critical value for utilizing natural gas. An open V(II) site incorporated into a metal-organic framework can provide a material with a considerably higher enthalpy of adsorption for dinitrogen than for methane, based on strong selective back bonding with the former but not the latter.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2012
Christopher M. Zall; Danylo Zherebetskyy; Allison L. Dzubak; Eckhard Bill; Laura Gagliardi; Connie C. Lu
The nature of the iron-iron bond in the mixed-valent diiron tris(diphenylforamidinate) complex Fe(2)(DPhF)(3), which was first reported by Cotton, Murillo et al. (Inorg. Chim. Acta 1994, 219, 7-10), has been examined using additional spectroscopic and theoretical methods. It is shown that the coupling between the two iron centers is strongly ferromagnetic, giving rise to an octet spin ground state. On the basis of Mössbauer spectroscopy, the two iron centers, formally mixed-valent Fe(II)Fe(I), are completely equivalent with an isomer shift δ = 0.65 mm s(-1) and quadrupole splitting ΔE(Q) = +0.32 mm s(-1). A large, positive zero-field splitting D(7/2) = 8.2 cm(-1) has been determined from magnetic susceptibility measurements. Multiconfigurational quantum studies of the complete molecule Fe(2)(DPhF)(3) found one dominant configuration (σ)(2)(π)(4)(π*)(2)(σ*)(1)(δ)(2)(δ*)(2), which accounts for 73% of the ground-state wave function. By considering all the configurations, an estimated metal-metal bond order of 1.15 has been calculated. Finally, Fe(2)(DPhF)(3) exhibits weak electronic absorptions in the visible and near-infrared regions, which are assigned as d-d transitions from the doubly occupied metal-metal π molecular orbital to half-occupied π*, δ, and δ* orbitals.
Chemical Science | 2015
Bess Vlaisavljevich; Samuel O. Odoh; Sondre K. Schnell; Allison L. Dzubak; Kyuho Lee; Nora Planas; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Laura Gagliardi; Berend Smit
Using a combination of density functional theory and lattice models, we study the effect of CO2 adsorption in an amine functionalized metal–organic framework.
Nature | 2015
Thomas M. McDonald; Jarad A. Mason; Xueqian Kong; Eric D. Bloch; David Gygi; Alessandro Dani; Valentina Crocellà; Filippo Giordanino; Samuel O. Odoh; Walter S. Drisdell; Bess Vlaisavljevich; Allison L. Dzubak; Roberta Poloni; Sondre K. Schnell; Nora Planas; Kyuho Lee; Tod A. Pascal; Liwen F. Wan; David Prendergast; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Berend Smit; Jeffrey B. Kortright; Laura Gagliardi; Silvia Bordiga; Jeffrey A. Reimer; Jeffrey R. Long
The process of carbon capture and sequestration has been proposed as a method of mitigating the build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. If implemented, the cost of electricity generated by a fossil fuel-burning power plant would rise substantially, owing to the expense of removing CO2 from the effluent stream. There is therefore an urgent need for more efficient gas separation technologies, such as those potentially offered by advanced solid adsorbents. Here we show that diamine-appended metal-organic frameworks can behave as ‘phase-change’ adsorbents, with unusual step-shaped CO2 adsorption isotherms that shift markedly with temperature. Results from spectroscopic, diffraction and computational studies show that the origin of the sharp adsorption step is an unprecedented cooperative process in which, above a metal-dependent threshold pressure, CO2 molecules insert into metal-amine bonds, inducing a reorganization of the amines into well-ordered chains of ammonium carbamate. As a consequence, large CO2 separation capacities can be achieved with small temperature swings, and regeneration energies appreciably lower than achievable with state-of-the-art aqueous amine solutions become feasible. The results provide a mechanistic framework for designing highly efficient adsorbents for removing CO2 from various gas mixtures, and yield insights into the conservation of Mg2+ within the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase family of enzymes.
Nature | 2016
Thomas M. McDonald; Jarad A. Mason; Xueqian Kong; Eric D. Bloch; David Gygi; Alessandro Dani; Valentina Crocellà; Filippo Giordanino; Samuel O. Odoh; Walter S. Drisdell; Bess Vlaisavljevich; Allison L. Dzubak; Roberta Poloni; Sondre K. Schnell; Nora Planas; Kyuho Lee; Tod A. Pascal; Liwen F. Wan; David Prendergast; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Berend Smit; Jeffrey B. Kortright; Laura Gagliardi; Silvia Bordiga; Jeffrey A. Reimer; Jeffrey R. Long; Grenoble ; Turin
The process of carbon capture and sequestration has been proposed as a method of mitigating the build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. If implemented, the cost of electricity generated by a fossil fuel-burning power plant would rise substantially, owing to the expense of removing CO2 from the effluent stream. There is therefore an urgent need for more efficient gas separation technologies, such as those potentially offered by advanced solid adsorbents. Here we show that diamine-appended metal-organic frameworks can behave as ‘phase-change’ adsorbents, with unusual step-shaped CO2 adsorption isotherms that shift markedly with temperature. Results from spectroscopic, diffraction and computational studies show that the origin of the sharp adsorption step is an unprecedented cooperative process in which, above a metal-dependent threshold pressure, CO2 molecules insert into metal-amine bonds, inducing a reorganization of the amines into well-ordered chains of ammonium carbamate. As a consequence, large CO2 separation capacities can be achieved with small temperature swings, and regeneration energies appreciably lower than achievable with state-of-the-art aqueous amine solutions become feasible. The results provide a mechanistic framework for designing highly efficient adsorbents for removing CO2 from various gas mixtures, and yield insights into the conservation of Mg2+ within the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase family of enzymes.
Nature Chemistry | 2012
Allison L. Dzubak; Li-Chiang Lin; Jihan Kim; Joseph A. Swisher; Roberta Poloni; Sergey N. Maximoff; Berend Smit; Laura Gagliardi
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Nora Planas; Allison L. Dzubak; Roberta Poloni; Li-Chiang Lin; Alison McManus; Thomas M. McDonald; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Jeffrey R. Long; Berend Smit; Laura Gagliardi