Harry G. W. Godfrey
University of Manchester
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Featured researches published by Harry G. W. Godfrey.
Nature Communications | 2017
Florian Moreau; Ivan da Silva; Nada H. Al Smail; Timothy L. Easun; Mathew Savage; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Stewart F. Parker; Pascal Manuel; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder
Understanding the mechanism of gas-sorbent interactions is of fundamental importance for the design of improved gas storage materials. Here we report the binding domains of carbon dioxide and acetylene in a tetra-amide functionalized metal-organic framework, MFM-188, at crystallographic resolution. Although exhibiting moderate porosity, desolvated MFM-188a exhibits exceptionally high carbon dioxide and acetylene adsorption uptakes with the latter (232 cm3 g−1 at 295 K and 1 bar) being the highest value observed for porous solids under these conditions to the best of our knowledge. Neutron diffraction and inelastic neutron scattering studies enable the direct observation of the role of amide groups in substrate binding, representing an example of probing gas-amide binding interactions by such experiments. This study reveals that the combination of polyamide groups, open metal sites, appropriate pore geometry and cooperative binding between guest molecules is responsible for the high uptakes of acetylene and carbon dioxide in MFM-188a.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Oguarabau Benson; Ivan da Silva; Stephen P. Argent; Rafel Cabot; Mathew Savage; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Yong Yan; Stewart F. Parker; Pascal Manuel; Matthew J. Lennox; Tamoghna Mitra; Timothy L. Easun; William Lewis; Alexander J. Blake; Elena Besley; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder
An amide-functionalized metal organic framework (MOF) material, MFM-136, shows a high CO2 uptake of 12.6 mmol g–1 at 20 bar and 298 K. MFM-136 is the first example of an acylamide pyrimidyl isophthalate MOF without open metal sites and, thus, provides a unique platform to study guest binding, particularly the role of free amides. Neutron diffraction reveals that, surprisingly, there is no direct binding between the adsorbed CO2/CH4 molecules and the pendant amide group in the pore. This observation has been confirmed unambiguously by inelastic neutron spectroscopy. This suggests that introduction of functional groups solely may not necessarily induce specific guest–host binding in porous materials, but it is a combination of pore size, geometry, and functional group that leads to enhanced gas adsorption properties.
Nature Communications | 2017
Zhenzhong Lu; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Ivan da Silva; Mathew Savage; Floriana Tuna; Eric J. L. McInnes; Simon J. Teat; Kevin J. Gagnon; Mark D. Frogley; Pascal Manuel; Svemir Rudić; Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta; Timothy L. Easun; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder
Hydrogen bonds dominate many chemical and biological processes, and chemical modification enables control and modulation of host–guest systems. Here we report a targeted modification of hydrogen bonding and its effect on guest binding in redox-active materials. MFM-300(VIII) {[VIII2(OH)2(L)], LH4=biphenyl-3,3′,5,5′-tetracarboxylic acid} can be oxidized to isostructural MFM-300(VIV), [VIV2O2(L)], in which deprotonation of the bridging hydroxyl groups occurs. MFM-300(VIII) shows the second highest CO2 uptake capacity in metal-organic framework materials at 298 K and 1 bar (6.0 mmol g−1) and involves hydrogen bonding between the OH group of the host and the O-donor of CO2, which binds in an end-on manner, =1.863(1) Å. In contrast, CO2-loaded MFM-300(VIV) shows CO2 bound side-on to the oxy group and sandwiched between two phenyl groups involving a unique ···c.g.phenyl interaction [3.069(2), 3.146(3) Å]. The macroscopic packing of CO2 in the pores is directly influenced by these primary binding sites.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Xinran Zhang; Ivan da Silva; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Samantha K. Callear; Sergey A. Sapchenko; Iñigo J. Vitorica-Yrezabal; Mark D. Frogley; Gianfelice Cinque; Chiu C. Tang; Carlotta Giacobbe; Catherine Dejoie; Svemir Rudić; Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta; Melissa A. Denecke; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder
During nuclear waste disposal process, radioactive iodine as a fission product can be released. The widespread implementation of sustainable nuclear energy thus requires the development of efficient iodine stores that have simultaneously high capacity, stability and more importantly, storage density (and hence minimized system volume). Here, we report high I2 adsorption in a series of robust porous metal–organic materials, MFM-300(M) (M = Al, Sc, Fe, In). MFM-300(Sc) exhibits fully reversible I2 uptake of 1.54 g g–1, and its structure remains completely unperturbed upon inclusion/removal of I2. Direct observation and quantification of the adsorption, binding domains and dynamics of guest I2 molecules within these hosts have been achieved using XPS, TGA-MS, high resolution synchrotron X-ray diffraction, pair distribution function analysis, Raman, terahertz and neutron spectroscopy, coupled with density functional theory modeling. These complementary techniques reveal a comprehensive understanding of the host–I2 and I2–I2 binding interactions at a molecular level. The initial binding site of I2 in MFM-300(Sc), I2I, is located near the bridging hydroxyl group of the [ScO4(OH)2] moiety [I2I···H–O = 2.263(9) Å] with an occupancy of 0.268. I2II is located interstitially between two phenyl rings of neighboring ligand molecules [I2II···phenyl ring = 3.378(9) and 4.228(5) Å]. I2II is 4.565(2) Å from the hydroxyl group with an occupancy of 0.208. Significantly, at high I2 loading an unprecedented self-aggregation of I2 molecules into triple-helical chains within the confined nanovoids has been observed at crystallographic resolution, leading to a highly efficient packing of I2 molecules with an exceptional I2 storage density of 3.08 g cm–3 in MFM-300(Sc).
Nature Materials | 2018
Xue Han; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Lydia Briggs; Andrew Davies; Luke L. Daemen; Alena M. Sheveleva; Floriana Tuna; Eric J. L. McInnes; Junliang Sun; Christina Drathen; Michael W. George; Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta; K. Mark Thomas; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder
Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) is a major air pollutant causing significant environmental1,2 and health problems3,4. We report reversible adsorption of NO2 in a robust metal–organic framework. Under ambient conditions, MFM-300(Al) exhibits a reversible NO2 isotherm uptake of 14.1 mmol g−1, and, more importantly, exceptional selective removal of low-concentration NO2 (5,000 to <1 ppm) from gas mixtures. Complementary experiments reveal five types of supramolecular interaction that cooperatively bind both NO2 and N2O4 molecules within MFM-300(Al). We find that the in situ equilibrium 2NO2 ↔ N2O4 within the pores is pressure-independent, whereas ex situ this equilibrium is an exemplary pressure-dependent first-order process. The coexistence of helical monomer–dimer chains of NO2 in MFM-300(Al) could provide a foundation for the fundamental understanding of the chemical properties of guest molecules within porous hosts. This work may pave the way for the development of future capture and conversion technologies.High and reversible nitrogen dioxide (NO2) uptake, and low-concentration NO2 removal from gas mixtures, is observed in a metal–organic framework. The NO2 is bound within the pores by cooperative supramolecular interactions.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Iñigo J. Vitorica-Yrezabal; Daniel Florin Sava; Grigore A. Timco; Martyn S. Brown; Mathew Savage; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Florian Moreau; Martin Schröder; Flor R. Siperstein; Lee Brammer; Sihai Yang; Martin P. Attfield; Joseph J. W. McDouall; Richard E. P. Winpenny
The {Cr8 } metallacrown [CrF(O2 Ct Bu)2 ]8 , containing a F-lined internal cavity, shows high selectivity for CO2 over N2 . DFT calculations and absorption studies support the multiple binding of F-groups to the C-center of CO2 (C⋅⋅⋅F 3.190(9)-3.389(9) Å), as confirmed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Thien D Duong; Sergey A. Sapchenko; Ivan da Silva; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Luke L. Daemen; Pascal Manuel; Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder
We report the first example of crystallographic observation of acetylene binding to −NO2 groups in a metal–organic framework (MOF). Functionalization of MFM-102 with −NO2 groups on phenyl groups leads to a 15% reduction in BET surface area in MFM-102-NO2. However, this is coupled to a 28% increase in acetylene adsorption to 192 cm3 g–1 at 298 K and 1 bar, comparable to other leading porous materials. Neutron diffraction and inelastic scattering experiments reveal the role of −NO2 groups, in cooperation with open metal sites, in the binding of acetylene in MFM-102-NO2.
Chemistry of Materials | 2016
Shan Gao; Christopher G. Morris; Zhenzhong Lu; Yong Yan; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Claire A. Murray; Chiu C. Tang; K. Mark Thomas; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder
Chemical Science | 2017
Christopher G. Morris; Nicholas M. Jacques; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Tamoghna Mitra; Detlev Fritsch; Zhenzhong Lu; Claire A. Murray; Jonathan Potter; Tom M. Cobb; Fajin Yuan; Chiu C. Tang; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder
Chemical Science | 2018
Zhenzhong Lu; Harry G. W. Godfrey; Ivan da Silva; Mathew Savage; Pascal Manuel; Svemir Rudić; Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta; Sihai Yang; Martin Schröder