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Dive into the research topics where Lucy E. Darago is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucy E. Darago.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Electronic Conductivity, Ferrimagnetic Ordering, and Reductive Insertion Mediated by Organic Mixed-Valence in a Ferric Semiquinoid Metal–Organic Framework

Lucy E. Darago; Michael L. Aubrey; Chung Jui Yu; Miguel I. Gonzalez; Jeffrey R. Long

A three-dimensional network solid composed of Fe(III) centers and paramagnetic semiquinoid linkers, (NBu4)2Fe(III)2(dhbq)3 (dhbq(2-/3-) = 2,5-dioxidobenzoquinone/1,2-dioxido-4,5-semiquinone), is shown to exhibit a conductivity of 0.16 ± 0.01 S/cm at 298 K, one of the highest values yet observed for a metal-organic framework (MOF). The origin of this electronic conductivity is determined to be ligand mixed-valency, which is characterized using a suite of spectroscopic techniques, slow-scan cyclic voltammetry, and variable-temperature conductivity and magnetic susceptibility measurements. Importantly, UV-vis-NIR diffuse reflectance measurements reveal the first observation of Robin-Day Class II/III mixed valency in a MOF. Pursuit of stoichiometric control over the ligand redox states resulted in synthesis of the reduced framework material Na0.9(NBu4)1.8Fe(III)2(dhbq)3. Differences in electronic conductivity and magnetic ordering temperature between the two compounds are investigated and correlated to the relative ratio of the two different ligand redox states. Overall, the transition metal-semiquinoid system is established as a particularly promising scaffold for achieving tunable long-range electronic communication in MOFs.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Reversible CO Scavenging via Adsorbate-Dependent Spin State Transitions in an Iron(II)-Triazolate Metal-Organic Framework.

Douglas A. Reed; Dianne J. Xiao; Miguel I. Gonzalez; Lucy E. Darago; Zoey R. Herm; Fernande Grandjean; Jeffrey R. Long

A new metal-organic framework, Fe-BTTri (Fe3[(Fe4Cl)3(BTTri)8]2·18CH3OH, H3BTTri =1,3,5-tris(1H-1,2,3-triazol-5-yl)benzene)), is found to be highly selective in the adsorption of CO over a variety of other gas molecules, making it extremely effective, for example, in the removal of trace CO from mixtures with H2, N2, and CH4. This framework not only displays significant CO adsorption capacity at very low pressures (1.45 mmol/g at just 100 μbar), but, importantly, also exhibits readily reversible CO binding. Fe-BTTri utilizes a unique spin state change mechanism to bind CO in which the coordinatively unsaturated, high-spin Fe(II) centers of the framework convert to octahedral, low-spin Fe(II) centers upon CO coordination. Desorption of CO converts the Fe(II) sites back to a high-spin ground state, enabling the facile regeneration and recyclability of the material. This spin state change is supported by characterization via infrared spectroscopy, single crystal X-ray analysis, Mössbauer spectroscopy, and magnetic susceptibility measurements. Importantly, the spin state change is selective for CO and is not observed in the presence of other gases, such as H2, N2, CO2, CH4, or other hydrocarbons, resulting in unprecedentedly high selectivities for CO adsorption for use in CO/H2, CO/N2, and CO/CH4 separations and in preferential CO adsorption over typical strongly adsorbing gases like CO2 and ethylene. While adsorbate-induced spin state transitions are well-known in molecular chemistry, particularly for CO, to our knowledge this is the first time such behavior has been observed in a porous material suitable for use in a gas separation process. Potentially, this effect can be extended to selective separations involving other π-acids.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Selective, tunable O2 binding in cobalt(II)–triazolate/pyrazolate metal–organic frameworks

Dianne J. Xiao; Miguel I. Gonzalez; Lucy E. Darago; Konstantinos D. Vogiatzis; Emmanuel Haldoupis; Laura Gagliardi; Jeffrey R. Long

The air-free reaction of CoCl2 with 1,3,5-tri(1H-1,2,3-triazol-5-yl)benzene (H3BTTri) in N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) and methanol leads to the formation of Co-BTTri (Co3[(Co4Cl)3(BTTri)8]2·DMF), a sodalite-type metal–organic framework. Desolvation of this material generates coordinatively unsaturated low-spin cobalt(II) centers that exhibit a strong preference for binding O2 over N2, with isosteric heats of adsorption (Qst) of −34(1) and −12(1) kJ/mol, respectively. The low-spin (S = 1/2) electronic configuration of the metal centers in the desolvated framework is supported by structural, magnetic susceptibility, and computational studies. A single-crystal X-ray structure determination reveals that O2 binds end-on to each framework cobalt center in a 1:1 ratio with a Co–O2 bond distance of 1.973(6) Å. Replacement of one of the triazolate linkers with a more electron-donating pyrazolate group leads to the isostructural framework Co-BDTriP (Co3[(Co4Cl)3(BDTriP)8]2·DMF; H3BDTriP = 5,5′-(5-(1H-pyrazol-4-yl)-1,3-phenylene)bis(1H-1,2,3-triazole)), which demonstrates markedly higher yet still fully reversible O2 affinities (Qst = −47(1) kJ/mol at low loadings). Electronic structure calculations suggest that the O2 adducts in Co-BTTri are best described as cobalt(II)–dioxygen species with partial electron transfer, while the stronger binding sites in Co-BDTriP form cobalt(III)–superoxo moieties. The stability, selectivity, and high O2 adsorption capacity of these materials render them promising new adsorbents for air separation processes.


Nature Communications | 2017

Giant coercivity and high magnetic blocking temperatures for N 2 3− radical-bridged dilanthanide complexes upon ligand dissociation

Selvan Demir; Miguel I. Gonzalez; Lucy E. Darago; William J. Evans; Jeffrey R. Long

Increasing the operating temperatures of single-molecule magnets—molecules that can retain magnetic polarization in the absence of an applied field—has potential implications toward information storage and computing, and may also inform the development of new bulk magnets. Progress toward these goals relies upon the development of synthetic chemistry enabling enhancement of the thermal barrier to reversal of the magnetic moment, while suppressing alternative relaxation processes. Herein, we show that pairing the axial magnetic anisotropy enforced by tetramethylcyclopentadienyl (CpMe4H) capping ligands with strong magnetic exchange coupling provided by an N23− radical bridging ligand results in a series of dilanthanide complexes exhibiting exceptionally large magnetic hysteresis loops that persist to high temperatures. Significantly, reducing the coordination number of the metal centers appears to increase axial magnetic anisotropy, giving rise to larger magnetic relaxation barriers and 100-s magnetic blocking temperatures of up to 20 K, as observed for the complex [K(crypt-222)][(CpMe4H2Tb)2(μ−


Nature | 2017

A spin transition mechanism for cooperative adsorption in metal–organic frameworks

Douglas A. Reed; Benjamin K. Keitz; Julia Oktawiec; Jarad A. Mason; Tomče Runčevski; Dianne J. Xiao; Lucy E. Darago; Valentina Crocellà; Silvia Bordiga; Jeffrey R. Long


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

A Terminal Fluoride Ligand Generates Axial Magnetic Anisotropy in Dysprosium Complexes

Lucie Norel; Lucy E. Darago; Boris Le Guennic; Khetpakorn Chakarawet; Miguel I. Gonzalez; Jacob H. Olshansky; Stéphane Rigaut; Jeffrey R. Long

{\rm{N}}_2^ \cdot


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Manganese–Cobalt Oxido Cubanes Relevant to Manganese-Doped Water Oxidation Catalysts

Andy I. Nguyen; Daniel L. M. Suess; Lucy E. Darago; Paul H. Oyala; Daniel S. Levine; Micah S. Ziegler; R. David Britt; T. Don Tilley


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

N2⋅)].Single-molecule magnets typically only retain information in the presence of an applied magnetic field and at very low temperatures. Here, Demir, Long and co-workers design N23– radical-bridged dilanthanide complexes that exhibit giant coercivities and 100-s magnetic blocking temperatures of up to 20 K.


Nature Materials | 2018

Electron delocalization and charge mobility as a function of reduction in a metal–organic framework

Michael L. Aubrey; Brian M. Wiers; Sean C. Andrews; Tsuneaki Sakurai; Sebastian E. Reyes-Lillo; Samia M. Hamed; Chung Jui Yu; Lucy E. Darago; Jarad A. Mason; Jin Ook Baeg; Fernande Grandjean; Gary J. Long; Shu Seki; Jeffrey B. Neaton; Peidong Yang; Jeffrey R. Long

Cooperative binding, whereby an initial binding event facilitates the uptake of additional substrate molecules, is common in biological systems such as haemoglobin. It was recently shown that porous solids that exhibit cooperative binding have substantial energetic benefits over traditional adsorbents, but few guidelines currently exist for the design of such materials. In principle, metal–organic frameworks that contain coordinatively unsaturated metal centres could act as both selective and cooperative adsorbents if guest binding at one site were to trigger an electronic transformation that subsequently altered the binding properties at neighbouring metal sites. Here we illustrate this concept through the selective adsorption of carbon monoxide (CO) in a series of metal–organic frameworks featuring coordinatively unsaturated iron(ii) sites. Functioning via a mechanism by which neighbouring iron(ii) sites undergo a spin-state transition above a threshold CO pressure, these materials exhibit large CO separation capacities with only small changes in temperature. The very low regeneration energies that result may enable more efficient Fischer–Tropsch conversions and extraction of CO from industrial waste feeds, which currently underutilize this versatile carbon synthon. The electronic basis for the cooperative adsorption demonstrated here could provide a general strategy for designing efficient and selective adsorbents suitable for various separations.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Control of Electronic Structure and Conductivity in Two-Dimensional Metal–Semiquinoid Frameworks of Titanium, Vanadium, and Chromium

Michael E. Ziebel; Lucy E. Darago; Jeffrey R. Long

The first dysprosium complexes with a terminal fluoride ligand are obtained as air-stable compounds. The strong, highly electrostatic dysprosium-fluoride bond generates a large axial crystal-field splitting of the J=15/2 ground state, as evidenced by high-resolution luminescence spectroscopy and correlated with the single-molecule magnet behavior through experimental magnetic susceptibility data and ab initio calculations.

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Jeffrey R. Long

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Dianne J. Xiao

University of California

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Chung Jui Yu

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Fernande Grandjean

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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Filipp Furche

University of California

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