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Dive into the research topics where Joshua Borycz is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua Borycz.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

A Hafnium-Based Metal–Organic Framework as an Efficient and Multifunctional Catalyst for Facile CO2 Fixation and Regioselective and Enantioretentive Epoxide Activation

M. Hassan Beyzavi; Rachel C. Klet; Samat Tussupbayev; Joshua Borycz; Nicolaas A. Vermeulen; Christopher J. Cramer; J. Fraser Stoddart; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha

Porous heterogeneous catalysts play a pivotal role in the chemical industry. Herein a new Hf-based metal-organic framework (Hf-NU-1000) incorporating Hf6 clusters is reported. It demonstrates high catalytic efficiency for the activation of epoxides, facilitating the quantitative chemical fixation of CO2 into five-membered cyclic carbonates under ambient conditions, rendering this material an excellent catalyst. As a multifunctional catalyst, Hf-NU-1000 is also efficient for other epoxide activations, leading to the regioselective and enantioretentive formation of 1,2-bifuctionalized systems via solvolytic nucleophilic ring opening.


Nature Chemistry | 2014

Oxidation of ethane to ethanol by N2O in a metal–organic framework with coordinatively unsaturated iron(II) sites

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 Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Defining the Proton Topology of the Zr6-Based Metal-Organic Framework NU-1000.

Nora Planas; Joseph E. Mondloch; Samat Tussupbayev; Joshua Borycz; Laura Gagliardi; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha; Christopher J. Cramer

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) constructed from Zr6-based nodes have recently received considerable attention given their exceptional thermal, chemical, and mechanical stability. Because of this, the structural diversity of Zr6-based MOFs has expanded considerably and in turn given rise to difficulty in their precise characterization. In particular it has been difficult to assign where protons (needed for charge balance) reside on some Zr6-based nodes. Elucidating the precise proton topologies in Zr6-based MOFs will have wide ranging implications in defining their chemical reactivity, acid/base characteristics, conductivity, and chemical catalysis. Here we have used a combined quantum mechanical and experimental approach to elucidate the precise proton topology of the Zr6-based framework NU-1000. Our data indicate that a mixed node topology, [Zr6(μ3-O)4(μ3-OH)4(OH)4 (OH2)4](8+), is preferred and simultaneously rule out five alternative node topologies.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Single-Site Organozirconium Catalyst Embedded in a Metal–Organic Framework

Rachel C. Klet; Samat Tussupbayev; Joshua Borycz; James R. Gallagher; Madelyn Marie Stalzer; Jeffrey T. Miller; Laura Gagliardi; Joseph T. Hupp; Tobin J. Marks; Christopher J. Cramer; Massimiliano Delferro; Omar K. Farha

A structurally well-defined mesoporous Hf-based metal-organic framework (Hf-NU-1000) is employed as a well-defined scaffold for a highly electrophilic single-site d(0) Zr-benzyl catalytic center. This new material Hf-NU-1000-ZrBn is fully characterized by a variety of spectroscopic techniques and DFT computation. Hf-NU-1000-ZrBn is found to be a promising single-component catalyst (i.e., not requiring a catalyst/activator) for ethylene and stereoregular 1-hexene polymerization.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Mechanism of Oxidation of Ethane to Ethanol at Iron(IV)–Oxo Sites in Magnesium-Diluted Fe2(dobdc)

Pragya Verma; Konstantinos D. Vogiatzis; Nora Planas; Joshua Borycz; Dianne J. Xiao; Jeffrey R. Long; Laura Gagliardi; Donald G. Truhlar

The catalytic properties of the metal-organic framework Fe2(dobdc), containing open Fe(II) sites, include hydroxylation of phenol by pure Fe2(dobdc) and hydroxylation of ethane by its magnesium-diluted analogue, Fe0.1Mg1.9(dobdc). In earlier work, the latter reaction was proposed to occur through a redox mechanism involving the generation of an iron(IV)-oxo species, which is an intermediate that is also observed or postulated (depending on the case) in some heme and nonheme enzymes and their model complexes. In the present work, we present a detailed mechanism by which the catalytic material, Fe0.1Mg1.9(dobdc), activates the strong C-H bonds of ethane. Kohn-Sham density functional and multireference wave function calculations have been performed to characterize the electronic structure of key species. We show that the catalytic nonheme-Fe hydroxylation of the strong C-H bond of ethane proceeds by a quintet single-state σ-attack pathway after the formation of highly reactive iron-oxo intermediate. The mechanistic pathway involves three key transition states, with the highest activation barrier for the transfer of oxygen from N2O to the Fe(II) center. The uncatalyzed reaction, where nitrous oxide directly oxidizes ethane to ethanol is found to have an activation barrier of 280 kJ/mol, in contrast to 82 kJ/mol for the slowest step in the iron(IV)-oxo catalytic mechanism. The energetics of the C-H bond activation steps of ethane and methane are also compared. Dehydrogenation and dissociation pathways that can compete with the formation of ethanol were shown to involve higher barriers than the hydroxylation pathway.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2013

Single-Ion Magnetic Anisotropy and Isotropic Magnetic Couplings in the Metal–Organic Framework Fe2(dobdc)

Rémi Maurice; Pragya Verma; Joseph M. Zadrozny; Sijie Luo; Joshua Borycz; Jeffrey R. Long; Donald G. Truhlar; Laura Gagliardi

The metal-organic framework Fe2(dobdc) (dobdc(4-) = 2,5-dioxido-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate), often referred to as Fe-MOF-74, possesses many interesting properties such as a high selectivity in olefin/paraffin separations. This compound contains open-shell Fe(II) ions with open coordination sites which may have large single-ion magnetic anisotropies, as well as isotropic couplings between the nearest and next nearest neighbor magnetic sites. To complement a previous analysis of experimental data made by considering only isotropic couplings [Bloch et al. Science 2012, 335, 1606], the magnitude of the main magnetic interactions are here assessed with quantum chemical calculations performed on a finite size cluster. It is shown that the single-ion anisotropy is governed by same-spin spin-orbit interactions (i.e., weak crystal-field regime), and that this effect is not negligible compared to the nearest neighbor isotropic couplings. Additional magnetic data reveal a metamagnetic behavior at low temperature. This effect can be attributed to various microscopic interactions, and the most probable scenarios are discussed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Thermal Stabilization of Metal-Organic Framework-Derived Single-Site Catalytic Clusters through Nanocasting.

Camille D. Malonzo; Sammy Shaker; Limin Ren; Steven D. Prinslow; Ana E. Platero-Prats; Leighanne C. Gallington; Joshua Borycz; Anthony B. Thompson; Timothy C. Wang; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; Connie C. Lu; Karena W. Chapman; Jason C. Myers; R. Lee Penn; Laura Gagliardi; Michael Tsapatsis; Andreas Stein

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) provide convenient systems for organizing high concentrations of single catalytic sites derived from metallic or oxo-metallic nodes. However, high-temperature processes cause agglomeration of these nodes, so that the single-site character and catalytic activity are lost. In this work, we present a simple nanocasting approach to provide a thermally stable secondary scaffold for MOF-based catalytic single sites, preventing their aggregation even after exposure to air at 600 °C. We describe the nanocasting of NU-1000, a MOF with 3 nm channels and Lewis-acidic oxozirconium clusters, with silica. By condensing tetramethylorthosilicate within the NU-1000 pores via a vapor-phase HCl treatment, a silica layer is created on the inner walls of NU-1000. This silica layer provides anchoring sites for the oxozirconium clusters in NU-1000 after the organic linkers are removed at high temperatures. Differential pair distribution functions obtained from synchrotron X-ray scattering confirmed that isolated oxozirconium clusters are maintained in the heated nanocast materials. Pyridine adsorption experiments and a glucose isomerization reaction demonstrate that the clusters remain accessible to reagents and maintain their acidic character and catalytic activity even after the nanocast materials have been heated to 500-600 °C in air. Density functional theory calculations show a correlation between the Lewis acidity of the oxozirconium clusters and their catalytic activity. The ability to produce MOF-derived materials that retain their catalytic properties after exposure to high temperatures makes nanocasting a useful technique for obtaining single-site catalysts suitable for high-temperature reactions.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2016

Structural and Electronic Effects on the Properties of Fe2(dobdc) upon Oxidation with N2O

Joshua Borycz; Joachim Paier; Pragya Verma; Lucy E. Darago; Dianne J. Xiao; Donald G. Truhlar; Jeffrey R. Long; Laura Gagliardi

We report electronic, vibrational, and magnetic properties, together with their structural dependences, for the metal-organic framework Fe2(dobdc) (dobdc(4-) = 2,5-dioxido-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) and its derivatives, Fe2(O)2(dobdc) and Fe2(OH)2(dobdc)-species arising in the previously proposed mechanism for the oxidation of ethane to ethanol using N2O as an oxidant. Magnetic susceptibility measurements reported for Fe2(dobdc) in an earlier study and reported in the current study for Fe(II)0.26[Fe(III)(OH)]1.74(dobdc)(DMF)0.15(THF)0.22, which is more simply referred to as Fe2(OH)2(dobdc), were used to confirm the computational results. Theory was also compared to experiment for infrared spectra and powder X-ray diffraction structures. Structural and magnetic properties were computed by using Kohn-Sham density functional theory both with periodic boundary conditions and with cluster models. In addition, we studied the effects of different treatments of the exchange interactions on the magnetic coupling parameters by comparing several approaches to the exchange-correlation functional: generalized gradient approximation (GGA), GGA with empirical Coulomb and exchange integrals for 3d electrons (GGA+U), nonseparable gradient approximation (NGA) with empirical Coulomb and exchange integrals for 3d electrons (NGA+U), hybrid GGA, meta-GGA, and hybrid meta-GGA. We found the coupling between the metal centers along a chain to be ferromagnetic in the case of Fe2(dobdc) and antiferromagnetic in the cases of Fe2(O)2(dobdc) and Fe2(OH)2(dobdc). The shift in magnetic coupling behavior correlates with the changing electronic structure of the framework, which derives from both structural and electronic changes that occur upon metal oxidation and addition of the charge-balancing oxo and hydroxo ligands.


Chemistry of Materials | 2015

Targeted Single-Site MOF Node Modification: Trivalent Metal Loading via Atomic Layer Deposition

In Soo Kim; Joshua Borycz; Ana E. Platero-Prats; Samat Tussupbayev; Timothy C. Wang; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; Laura Gagliardi; Karena W. Chapman; Christopher J. Cramer; Alex B. F. Martinson


ACS Catalysis | 2016

Tuning Zr6 Metal–Organic Framework (MOF) Nodes as Catalyst Supports: Site Densities and Electron-Donor Properties Influence Molecular Iridium Complexes as Ethylene Conversion Catalysts

Dong Yang; Samuel O. Odoh; Joshua Borycz; Timothy C. Wang; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; Christopher J. Cramer; Laura Gagliardi; Bruce C. Gates

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Jeffrey R. Long

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Pragya Verma

University of Minnesota

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Dianne J. Xiao

University of California

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