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Dive into the research topics where David Fairen-Jimenez is active.

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Featured researches published by David Fairen-Jimenez.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Opening the gate: framework flexibility in ZIF-8 explored by experiments and simulations.

David Fairen-Jimenez; Stephen A. Moggach; Michael T. Wharmby; Paul A. Wright; Simon Parsons; Tina Düren

ZIF-8 is a zeolitic imidazole-based metal-organic framework with large cavities interconnected by narrow windows. Because the small size of the windows, it allows in principle for molecular sieving of gases such as H(2) and CH(4). However, the unexpected adsorption of large molecules on ZIF-8 suggests the existence of structural flexibility. ZIF-8 flexibility is explored in this work combining different experimental techniques with molecular simulation. We show that the ZIF-8 structure is modified by gas adsorption uptake in the same way as it is at a very high pressure (i.e., 14,700 bar) due to a swing effect in the imidazolate linkers, giving access to the porosity. Tuning the flexibility, and so the opening of the small windows, has a further impact on the design of advanced molecular sieving membrane materials for gas separation, adjusting the access of fluids to the porous network.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Vapor-phase metalation by atomic layer deposition in a metal-organic framework

Joseph E. Mondloch; Wojciech Bury; David Fairen-Jimenez; Stephanie Kwon; Erica J. DeMarco; Mitchell H. Weston; Amy A. Sarjeant; SonBinh T. Nguyen; Peter C. Stair; Randall Q. Snurr; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have received attention for a myriad of potential applications including catalysis, gas storage, and gas separation. Coordinatively unsaturated metal ions often enable key functional behavior of these materials. Most commonly, MOFs have been metalated from the condensed phase (i.e., from solution). Here we introduce a new synthetic strategy capable of metallating MOFs from the gas phase: atomic layer deposition (ALD). Key to enabling metalation by ALD In MOFs (AIM) was the synthesis of NU-1000, a new, thermally stable, Zr-based MOF with spatially oriented -OH groups and large 1D mesopores and apertures.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Incorporation of an A1/A2-difunctionalized pillar[5]arene into a metal-organic framework

Nathan L. Strutt; David Fairen-Jimenez; Julien Iehl; Marianne B. Lalonde; Randall Q. Snurr; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; J. Fraser Stoddart

An efficient synthetic route to an A1/A2-difunctionalized pillar[5]arene containing resolvable planar chirality has been developed and the arene employed as a strut in the synthesis of P5A-MOF-1, which has been demonstrated by X-ray powder diffraction analysis--supported by modeling--to be isoreticular with MOF-5. This metal-organic framework has an active domain that expresses good and selective uptake of neutral and positively charged electron-poor aromatic guests, which effect color changes of the cubic crystals from faint yellow to deep orange, arising from charge transfer between the guests and active domain of P5A-MOF-1.


Dalton Transactions | 2012

Flexibility and swing effect on the adsorption of energy-related gases on ZIF-8: combined experimental and simulation study

David Fairen-Jimenez; Raimondas Galvelis; Antonio Torrisi; Alistair D. Gellan; Michael T. Wharmby; Paul A. Wright; Caroline Mellot-Draznieks; Tina Düren

ZIF-8, a prototypical zeolitic porous coordination polymer, prepared via the self-assembly of tetrahedral atoms (e.g. Zn and Co) and organic imidazolate linkers, presents large cavities which are interconnected by narrow windows that allow, in principle, molecular sieving. However, ZIF-8 shows flexibility due to the swing of the imidazolate linkers, which results in the adsorption of molecules which are too large to fit through the narrow window. In this work, we assess the impact of this flexibility, previously only observed for nitrogen, and the level of agreement between the experimental and simulated isotherms of different energy-related gases on ZIF-8 (CO(2), CH(4) and alkanes). We combine experimental gas adsorption with GCMC simulations, using generic and adjusted force fields and DFT calculations with the Grimme dispersion correction. By solely adapting the UFF force field to reduce the Lennard-Jones parameter ε, we achieve excellent agreement between the simulated and experimental results not only for ZIF-8 but also for ZIF-20, where the transferability of the adapted force field is successfully tested. Regarding ZIF-8, we show that two different structural configurations are needed to properly describe the adsorption performance of this material, demonstrating that ZIF-8 is undergoing a structural change during gas adsorption. DFT calculations with the Grimme dispersion correction are consistent with the GCMC and experimental observations, illustrating the thermodynamics of the CH(4) adsorption sites and confirming the existence of a new adsorption site with a high binding energy within the 4-ring window of ZIF-8.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2014

Screening of bio-compatible metal–organic frameworks as potential drug carriers using Monte Carlo simulations

María C. Bernini; David Fairen-Jimenez; Marcelo Pasinetti; A.J. Ramirez-Pastor; Randall Q. Snurr

A series of bio-compatible metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have been studied as potential carriers for drug delivery applications. Grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) simulations were performed to study the adsorption of the model drug ibuprofen. Simulations were first validated with available experimental data for ibuprofen adsorption and release in MIL-53, MIL-100 and MIL-101. In the second stage, the study was extended to three additional MOFs with interesting properties in terms of bio-compatibility and porosity: CDMOF-1, based on edible precursors; MOF-74 containing a highly biocompatible metal (Mg); and BioMOF-100, a mesoporous MOF with extremely high pore volume. By comparing with experimental data, we show how GCMC simulation is able to predict the macroscopic performance of new porous MOFs in drug delivery applications, providing useful molecular-level insights and giving thermodynamic and structural details of the process. Adsorption isotherms, snapshots, energy of adsorption and radial distribution functions were used to analyse the drug delivery process.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Elucidating the Breathing of the Metal–Organic Framework MIL-53(Sc) with ab Initio Molecular Dynamics Simulations and in Situ X-ray Powder Diffraction Experiments

Linjiang Chen; John P. S. Mowat; David Fairen-Jimenez; Carole A. Morrison; Stephen P. Thompson; Paul A. Wright; Tina Düren

Ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations have been used to predict structural transitions of the breathing metal-organic framework (MOF) MIL-53(Sc) in response to changes in temperature over the range 100-623 K and adsorption of CO2 at 0-0.9 bar at 196 K. The method has for the first time been shown to predict successfully both temperature-dependent structural changes and the structural response to variable sorbate uptake of a flexible MOF. AIMD employing dispersion-corrected density functional theory accurately simulated the experimentally observed closure of MIL-53(Sc) upon solvent removal and the transition of the empty MOF from the closed-pore phase to the very-narrow-pore phase (symmetry change from P2(1)/c to C2/c) with increasing temperature, indicating that it can directly take into account entropic as well as enthalpic effects. We also used AIMD simulations to mimic the CO2 adsorption of MIL-53(Sc) in silico by allowing the MIL-53(Sc) framework to evolve freely in response to CO2 loadings corresponding to the two steps in the experimental adsorption isotherm. The resulting structures enabled the structure determination of the two CO2-containing intermediate and large-pore phases observed by experimental synchrotron X-ray diffraction studies with increasing CO2 pressure; this would not have been possible for the intermediate structure via conventional methods because of diffraction peak broadening. Furthermore, the strong and anisotropic peak broadening observed for the intermediate structure could be explained in terms of fluctuations of the framework predicted by the AIMD simulations. Fundamental insights from the molecular-level interactions further revealed the origin of the breathing of MIL-53(Sc) upon temperature variation and CO2 adsorption. These simulations illustrate the power of the AIMD method for the prediction and understanding of the behavior of flexible microporous solids.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Water-Stable Zirconium-Based Metal–Organic Framework Material with High-Surface Area and Gas-Storage Capacities

Oleksii V. Gutov; Wojciech Bury; Diego A. Gómez-Gualdrón; Vaiva Krungleviciute; David Fairen-Jimenez; Joseph E. Mondloch; Amy A. Sarjeant; Salih S. Al-Juaid; Randall Q. Snurr; Joseph T. Hupp; Taner Yildirim; Omar K. Farha

We designed, synthesized, and characterized a new Zr-based metal-organic framework material, NU-1100, with a pore volume of 1.53 ccg(-1) and Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area of 4020 m(2) g(-1) ; to our knowledge, currently the highest published for Zr-based MOFs. CH4 /CO2 /H2 adsorption isotherms were obtained over a broad range of pressures and temperatures and are in excellent agreement with the computational predictions. The total hydrogen adsorption at 65 bar and 77 K is 0.092 g g(-1) , which corresponds to 43 g L(-1) . The volumetric and gravimetric methane-storage capacities at 65 bar and 298 K are approximately 180 vSTP /v and 0.27 g g(-1) , respectively.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Structural Chemistry, Monoclinic-to-Orthorhombic Phase Transition, and CO2 Adsorption Behavior of the Small Pore Scandium Terephthalate, Sc2(O2CC6H4CO2)3, and Its Nitro- And Amino-Functionalized Derivatives

John P. S. Mowat; Stuart R. Miller; John M. Griffin; Valerie R. Seymour; Sharon E. Ashbrook; Stephen P. Thompson; David Fairen-Jimenez; Ana Maria Banu; Tina Düren; Paul A. Wright

The crystal structure of the small pore scandium terephthalate Sc(2)(O(2)CC(6)H(4)CO(2))(3) (hereafter Sc(2)BDC(3), BDC = 1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) has been investigated as a function of temperature and of functionalization, and its performance as an adsorbent for CO(2) has been examined. The structure of Sc(2)BDC(3) has been followed in vacuo over the temperature range 140 to 523 K by high resolution synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction, revealing a phase change at 225 K from monoclinic C2/c (low temperature) to Fddd (high temperature). The orthorhombic form shows negative thermal expansivity of 2.4 × 10(-5) K(-1): Rietveld analysis shows that this results largely from a decrease in the c axis, which is caused by carboxylate group rotation. (2)H wide-line and MAS NMR of deuterated Sc(2)BDC(3) indicates reorientation of phenyl groups via π flips at temperatures above 298 K. The same framework solid has also been prepared using monofunctionalized terephthalate linkers containing -NH(2) and -NO(2) groups. The structure of Sc(2)(NH(2)-BDC)(3) has been determined by Rietveld analysis of synchrotron powder diffraction at 100 and 298 K and found to be orthorhombic at both temperatures, whereas the structure of Sc(2)(NO(2)-BDC)(3) has been determined by single crystal diffraction at 298 K and Rietveld analysis of synchrotron powder diffraction at 100, 298, 373, and 473 K and is found to be monoclinic at all temperatures. Partial ordering of functional groups is observed in each structure. CO(2) adsorption at 196 and 273 K indicates that whereas Sc(2)BDC(3) has the largest capacity, Sc(2)(NH(2)-BDC)(3) shows the highest uptake at low partial pressure because of strong -NH(2)···CO(2) interactions. Remarkably, Sc(2)(NO(2)-BDC)(3) adsorbs 2.6 mmol CO(2) g(-1) at 196 K (P/P(0) = 0.5), suggesting that the -NO(2) groups are able to rotate to allow CO(2) molecules to diffuse along the narrow channels.


Langmuir | 2010

Unusual adsorption behavior on metal-organic frameworks.

David Fairen-Jimenez; Nigel A. Seaton; Tina Düren

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have shown adsorption behavior that is not observed in other microporous materials such as zeolites or activated carbons. This study used grand canonical Monte Carlo simulation to evaluate a particular form of behavior, which corresponds to the presence of unusual type V adsorption isotherms. Study of a series of MOFs in the IRMOF family, containing chemically similar linkers of different length, showed that the presence of type V adsorption depends on a fine balance between the strength of the fluid-fluid and fluid-solid interactions, which in turn is a strong function of the length of the linker and therefore the pore size. A transition from type V behavior to the more common type I behavior is observed as the temperature increases. The temperature at which this transition occurs increases, and the transition becomes more diffuse, as the length of the linker increases. This type V behavior leads to an interesting possibility in the design of MOF adsorbents for use in gas separation and gas storage applications.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Metal–Organic Nanosheets Formed via Defect-Mediated Transformation of a Hafnium Metal–Organic Framework

Matthew J. Cliffe; Elizabeth Castillo-Martínez; Yue Wu; Jeongjae Lee; Alexander C. Forse; Francesca C. N. Firth; Peyman Z. Moghadam; David Fairen-Jimenez; Michael W. Gaultois; Joshua A. Hill; Oxana V. Magdysyuk; Ben Slater; Andrew L. Goodwin; Clare P. Grey

We report a hafnium-containing MOF, hcp UiO-67(Hf), which is a ligand-deficient layered analogue of the face-centered cubic fcu UiO-67(Hf). hcp UiO-67 accommodates its lower ligand:metal ratio compared to fcu UiO-67 through a new structural mechanism: the formation of a condensed “double cluster” (Hf12O8(OH)14), analogous to the condensation of coordination polyhedra in oxide frameworks. In oxide frameworks, variable stoichiometry can lead to more complex defect structures, e.g., crystallographic shear planes or modules with differing compositions, which can be the source of further chemical reactivity; likewise, the layered hcp UiO-67 can react further to reversibly form a two-dimensional metal–organic framework, hxl UiO-67. Both three-dimensional hcp UiO-67 and two-dimensional hxl UiO-67 can be delaminated to form metal–organic nanosheets. Delamination of hcp UiO-67 occurs through the cleavage of strong hafnium-carboxylate bonds and is effected under mild conditions, suggesting that defect-ordered MOFs could be a productive route to porous two-dimensional materials.

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Tian Tian

University of Cambridge

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Tina Düren

University of Edinburgh

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