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Dive into the research topics where Omar K. Farha is active.

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Featured researches published by Omar K. Farha.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2009

Metal–organic framework materials as catalysts

JeongYong Lee; Omar K. Farha; John E. Roberts; Karl A. Scheidt; SonBinh T. Nguyen; Joseph T. Hupp

A critical review of the emerging field of MOF-based catalysis is presented. Discussed are examples of: (a) opportunistic catalysis with metal nodes, (b) designed catalysis with framework nodes, (c) catalysis by homogeneous catalysts incorporated as framework struts, (d) catalysis by MOF-encapsulated molecular species, (e) catalysis by metal-free organic struts or cavity modifiers, and (f) catalysis by MOF-encapsulated clusters (66 references).


Nature Chemistry | 2010

De novo synthesis of a metal–organic framework material featuring ultrahigh surface area and gas storage capacities

Omar K. Farha; A. Ozgur Yazaydin; Ibrahim Eryazici; Christos D. Malliakas; Brad G. Hauser; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis; SonBinh T. Nguyen; Randall Q. Snurr; Joseph T. Hupp

Metal-organic frameworks--a class of porous hybrid materials built from metal ions and organic bridges--have recently shown great promise for a wide variety of applications. The large choice of building blocks means that the structures and pore characteristics of the metal-organic frameworks can be tuned relatively easily. However, despite much research, it remains challenging to prepare frameworks specifically tailored for particular applications. Here, we have used computational modelling to design and predictively characterize a metal-organic framework (NU-100) with a particularly high surface area. Subsequent experimental synthesis yielded a material, matching the calculated structure, with a high BET surface area (6,143 m(2) g(-1)). Furthermore, sorption measurements revealed that the material had high storage capacities for hydrogen (164 mg g(-1)) and carbon dioxide (2,315 mg g(-1))--gases of high importance in the contexts of clean energy and climate alteration, respectively--in excellent agreement with predictions from modelling.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2010

Rational design, synthesis, purification, and activation of metal-organic framework materials.

Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp

The emergence of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as functional ultrahigh surface area materials is one of the most exciting recent developments in solid-state chemistry. Now constituting thousands of distinct examples, MOFs are an intriguing class of hybrid materials that exist as infinite crystalline lattices with inorganic vertices and molecular-scale organic connectors. Useful properties such as large internal surface areas, ultralow densities, and the availability of uniformly structured cavities and portals of molecular dimensions characterize functional MOFs. Researchers have effectively exploited these unusual properties in applications such as hydrogen and methane storage, chemical separations, and selective chemical catalysis. In principle, one of the most attractive features of MOFs is the simplicity of their synthesis. Typically they are obtained via one-pot solvothermal preparations. However, with the simplicity come challenges. In particular, MOF materials, especially more complex ones, can be difficult to obtain in pure form and with the optimal degree of catenation, the interpenetration or interweaving of identical independent networks. Once these two issues are satisfied, the removal of the guest molecules (solvent from synthesis) without damaging the structural integrity of the material is often an additional challenge. In this Account, we review recent advances in the synthetic design, purification, and activation of metal-organic framework materials. We describe the rational design of a series of organic struts to limit framework catenation and thereby produce large pores. In addition, we demonstrate the rapid separation of desired MOFs from crystalline and amorphous contaminants cogenerated during synthesis based on their different densities. Finally, we discuss the mild and efficient activation of initially solvent-filled pores with supercritical carbon dioxide, yielding usable channels and high internal surface areas. We expect that the advances in the synthesis, separation, and activation of metal-organic frameworks could lead to MOFs with new structures and functions, better and faster separation and purification of these materials, and processing methods that avoid pore blockage and pore collapse.


Nature Chemistry | 2012

Imparting functionality to a metal–organic framework material by controlled nanoparticle encapsulation

Guang Kuo Lu; Shaozhou Li; Zhen Guo; Omar K. Farha; Brad G. Hauser; Xiaoying Qi; Yi Wang; Xin Wang; Sanyang Han; Xiaogang Liu; Joseph S. DuChene; Hua Zhang; Qichun Zhang; Xiaodong Chen; Jan Ma; Say Chye Joachim Loo; Wei David Wei; Yanhui Yang; Joseph T. Hupp; Fengwei Huo

Microporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) that display permanent porosity show great promise for a myriad of purposes. The potential applications of MOFs can be developed further and extended by encapsulating various functional species (for example, nanoparticles) within the frameworks. However, despite increasing numbers of reports of nanoparticle/MOF composites, simultaneously to control the size, composition, dispersed nature, spatial distribution and confinement of the incorporated nanoparticles within MOF matrices remains a significant challenge. Here, we report a controlled encapsulation strategy that enables surfactant-capped nanostructured objects of various sizes, shapes and compositions to be enshrouded by a zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF-8). The incorporated nanoparticles are well dispersed and fully confined within the ZIF-8 crystals. This strategy also allows the controlled incorporation of multiple nanoparticles within each ZIF-8 crystallite. The as-prepared nanoparticle/ZIF-8 composites exhibit active (catalytic, magnetic and optical) properties that derive from the nanoparticles as well as molecular sieving and orientation effects that originate from the framework material.


Nature Chemistry | 2012

Large-scale screening of hypothetical metal–organic frameworks

Christopher E. Wilmer; Michael Leaf; Chang Yeon Lee; Omar K. Farha; Brad G. Hauser; Joseph T. Hupp; Randall Q. Snurr

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are porous materials constructed from modular molecular building blocks, typically metal clusters and organic linkers. These can, in principle, be assembled to form an almost unlimited number of MOFs, yet materials reported to date represent only a tiny fraction of the possible combinations. Here, we demonstrate a computational approach to generate all conceivable MOFs from a given chemical library of building blocks (based on the structures of known MOFs) and rapidly screen them to find the best candidates for a specific application. From a library of 102 building blocks we generated 137,953 hypothetical MOFs and for each one calculated the pore-size distribution, surface area and methane-storage capacity. We identified over 300 MOFs with a predicted methane-storage capacity better than that of any known material, and this approach also revealed structure-property relationships. Methyl-functionalized MOFs were frequently top performers, so we selected one such promising MOF and experimentally confirmed its predicted capacity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

A Catalytically Active, Permanently Microporous MOF with Metalloporphyrin Struts

Abraham M. Shultz; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; SonBinh T. Nguyen

Through the use of the tetratopic ligand 1,2,4,5-tetrakis(4-carboxyphenyl)benzene as a key building block, a permanently microporous metal-organic framework with Lewis acidic (porphyrin)Zn struts, ZnPO-MOF, can be made in high yields. ZnPO-MOF can efficiently catalyze acyl-transfer reactions primarily by preconcentrating the substrates within its pores, in stark contrast to analogous supramolecular systems.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Methane Storage in Metal–Organic Frameworks: Current Records, Surprise Findings, and Challenges

Yang Peng; Vaiva Krungleviciute; Ibrahim Eryazici; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha; Taner Yildirim

We have examined the methane uptake properties of six of the most promising metal organic framework (MOF) materials: PCN-14, UTSA-20, HKUST-1, Ni-MOF-74 (Ni-CPO-27), NU-111, and NU-125. We discovered that HKUST-1, a material that is commercially available in gram scale, exhibits a room-temperature volumetric methane uptake that exceeds any value reported to date. The total uptake is about 230 cc(STP)/cc at 35 bar and 270 cc(STP)/cc at 65 bar, which meets the new volumetric target recently set by the Department of Energy (DOE) if the packing efficiency loss is ignored. We emphasize that MOFs with high surface areas and pore volumes perform better overall. NU-111, for example, reaches ~75% of both the gravimetric and the volumetric targets. We find that values for gravimetric uptake, pore volume, and inverse density of the MOFs we studied scale essentially linearly with surface area. From this linear dependence, we estimate that a MOF with surface area 7500 m(2)/g and pore volume 3.2 cc/g could reach the current DOE gravimetric target of 0.5 g/g while simultaneously exhibiting around ~200 cc/cc volumetric uptake. We note that while values for volumetric uptake are based on ideal single crystal densities, in reality the packing densities of MOFs are much lower. Finally, we show that compacting HKUST-1 into wafer shapes partially collapses the framework, decreasing both volumetric and gravimetric uptake significantly. Hence, one of the important challenges going forward is to find ways to pack MOFs efficiently without serious damage or to synthesize MOFs that can withstand substantial mechanical pressure.


Chemical Communications | 2013

A facile synthesis of UiO-66, UiO-67 and their derivatives

Michael J. Katz; Zachary J. Brown; Yamil J. Colón; Paul W. Siu; Karl A. Scheidt; Randall Q. Snurr; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha

A scalable, reproducible method of synthesizing UiO-66- and UiO-67-type MOFs, entailing the addition of HCl to the reaction mixture, has been investigated. The new protocol requires a fraction of the time of previously reported procedures, yields exceptional porosities, and works with a range of linkers.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Light-Harvesting Metal–Organic Frameworks (MOFs): Efficient Strut-to-Strut Energy Transfer in Bodipy and Porphyrin-Based MOFs

Chang Yeon Lee; Omar K. Farha; Bong Jin Hong; Amy A. Sarjeant; SonBinh T. Nguyen; Joseph T. Hupp

A pillared-paddlewheel type metal-organic framework material featuring bodipy- and porphyrin-based struts, and capable of harvesting light across the entire visible spectrum, has been synthesized. Efficient-essentially quantitative-strut-to-strut energy transfer (antenna behavior) was observed for the well-organized donor-acceptor assembly consituting the ordered MOF structure.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

2D Homologous Perovskites as Light-Absorbing Materials for Solar Cell Applications

Duyen H. Cao; Constantinos C. Stoumpos; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

We report on the fabrication and properties of the semiconducting 2D (CH3(CH2)3NH3)2(CH3NH3)(n-1)Pb(n)I(3n+1) (n = 1, 2, 3, and 4) perovskite thin films. The band gaps of the series decrease with increasing n values, from 2.24 eV (CH3(CH2)3NH3)2PbI4 (n = 1) to 1.52 eV CH3NH3PbI3 (n = ∞). The compounds exhibit strong light absorption in the visible region, accompanied by strong photoluminescence at room temperature, rendering them promising light absorbers for photovoltaic applications. Moreover, we find that thin films of the semi-2D perovskites display an ultrahigh surface coverage as a result of the unusual film self-assembly that orients the [Pb(n)I(3n+1)](-) layers perpendicular to the substrates. We have successfully implemented this 2D perovskite family in solid-state solar cells, and obtained an initial power conversion efficiency of 4.02%, featuring an open-circuit voltage (V(oc)) of 929 mV and a short-circuit current density (J(sc)) of 9.42 mA/cm(2) from the n = 3 compound. This result is even more encouraging considering that the device retains its performance after long exposure to a high-humidity environment. Overall, the homologous 2D halide perovskites define a promising class of stable and efficient light-absorbing materials for solid-state photovoltaics and other applications.

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Zhanyong Li

Northwestern University

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Peng Li

Northwestern University

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