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Featured researches published by Pravas Deria.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2014

Beyond post-synthesis modification: evolution of metal–organic frameworks via building block replacement

Pravas Deria; Joseph E. Mondloch; Olga Karagiaridi; Wojciech Bury; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are hybrid porous materials with many potential applications, which intimately depend on the presence of chemical functionality either at the organic linkers and/or at the metal nodes. Functionality that cannot be introduced into MOFs directly via de novo syntheses can be accessed through post-synthesis modification (PSM) on the reactive moieties of the linkers and/or nodes without disrupting the metal-linker bonds. Even more intriguing methods that go beyond PSM are herein termed building block replacement (BBR) which encompasses (i) solvent-assisted linker exchange (SALE), (ii) non-bridging ligand replacement, and (iii) transmetalation. These one-step or tandem BBR processes involve exchanging key structural components of the MOF, which in turn should allow for the evolution of protoMOF structures (i.e., the utilization of a parent MOF as a template) to design MOFs composed of completely new components, presumably via single crystal to single crystal transformations. The influence of building block replacement on the stability and properties of MOFs will be discussed, and some insights into their mechanistic aspects are provided. Future perspectives providing a glimpse into how these techniques can lead to various unexplored areas of MOF chemistry are also presented.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Perfluoroalkane Functionalization of NU-1000 via Solvent-Assisted Ligand Incorporation: Synthesis and CO2 Adsorption Studies

Pravas Deria; Joseph E. Mondloch; Emmanuel Tylianakis; Pritha Ghosh; Wojciech Bury; Randall Q. Snurr; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha

A new functionalization technique, solvent-assisted ligand incorporation (SALI), was developed to efficiently incorporate carboxylate-based functionalities in the Zr-based metal-organic framework, NU-1000. Unlike previous metal node functionalization strategies, which utilize dative bonding to coordinatively unsaturated metal sites, SALI introduces functional groups as charge compensating and strongly bound moieties to the Zr6 node. Utilizing SALI, we have efficiently attached perfluoroalkane carboxylates of various chain lengths (C1-C9) on the Zr6 nodes of NU-1000. These fluoroalkane-functionalized mesoporous MOFs, termed herein SALI-n, were studied experimentally and theoretically as potential CO2 capture materials.


Nano Letters | 2009

Helical Wrapping of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes by Water Soluble Poly(p-phenyleneethynylene)

Youn K. Kang; One Sun Lee; Pravas Deria; Sang Hoon Kim; Tae Hong Park; Dawn A. Bonnell; Jeffery G. Saven; Michael J. Therien

Amphiphilic, linear conjugated poly[p-{2,5-bis(3-propoxysulfonicacidsodiumsalt)}phenylene]ethynylene (PPES) efficiently disperses single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) under ultrasonication conditions into the aqueous phase. Vis-NIR absorption spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) demonstrate that these solubilized SWNTs are highly individualized. AFM and TEM data reveal that the interaction of PPES with SWNTs gives rise to a self-assembled superstructure in which a polymer monolayer helically wraps the nanotube surface; the observed PPES pitch length (13 +/- 2 nm) confirms structural predictions made via molecular dynamics simulations. This work underscores design elements important for engineering well-defined nanotube-semiconducting polymer hybrid structures.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Directed Growth of Electroactive Metal-Organic Framework Thin Films Using Electrophoretic Deposition

Idan Hod; Wojciech Bury; David M. Karlin; Pravas Deria; Chung-Wei Kung; Michael J. Katz; Monica C. So; Benjamin M. Klahr; Danni Jin; Yip Wah Chung; Teri W. Odom; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp

Electrophoretic deposition (EPD) is used to assemble metal-organic framework (MOF) materials in nano- and micro-particulate, thin-film form. The flexibility of the method is demonstrated by the successful deposition of 4 types of MOFs: NU-1000, UiO-66, HKUST-1, and Al-MIL-53. Additionally, EPD is used to pattern the growth of NU-1000 thin films that exhibit full electrochemical activity.


Chemical Communications | 2014

Versatile functionalization of the NU-1000 platform by solvent-assisted ligand incorporation

Pravas Deria; Wojciech Bury; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha

Solvent-assisted ligand incorporation (SALI) was utilized to efficiently insert various carboxylate-derived functionalities into the Zr-based metal-organic framework NU-1000 as charge compensating moieties strongly bound to the Zr6 nodes. SALI-derived functionalities are accessible for further chemical reactions such as click chemistry, imine condensation and pyridine quaternization.


Nature Communications | 2015

A porous proton-relaying metal-organic framework material that accelerates electrochemical hydrogen evolution

Idan Hod; Pravas Deria; Wojciech Bury; Joseph E. Mondloch; Chung-Wei Kung; Monica C. So; Matthew D. Sampson; Aaron W. Peters; Cliff P. Kubiak; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp

The availability of efficient hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) catalysts is of high importance for solar fuel technologies aimed at reducing future carbon emissions. Even though Pt electrodes are excellent HER electrocatalysts, commercialization of large-scale hydrogen production technology requires finding an equally efficient, low-cost, earth-abundant alternative. Here, high porosity, metal-organic framework (MOF) films have been used as scaffolds for the deposition of a Ni-S electrocatalyst. Compared with an MOF-free Ni-S, the resulting hybrid materials exhibit significantly enhanced performance for HER from aqueous acid, decreasing the kinetic overpotential by more than 200 mV at a benchmark current density of 10 mA cm−2. Although the initial aim was to improve electrocatalytic activity by greatly boosting the active area of the Ni-S catalyst, the performance enhancements instead were found to arise primarily from the ability of the proton-conductive MOF to favourably modify the immediate chemical environment of the sulfide-based catalyst.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

MOF Functionalization via Solvent-Assisted Ligand Incorporation: Phosphonates vs Carboxylates

Pravas Deria; Wojciech Bury; Idan Hod; Chung-Wei Kung; Olga Karagiaridi; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha

Solvent-assisted ligand incorporation (SALI) is useful for functionalizing the channels of metal-organic framework (MOF) materials such as NU-1000 that offer substitutionally labile zirconium(IV) coordination sites for nonbridging ligands. Each of the 30 or so previous examples relied upon coordination of a carboxylate ligand to achieve incorporation. Here we show that, with appropriate attention to ligand/node stoichiometry, SALI can also be achieved with phosphonate-terminated ligands. Consistent with stronger M(IV) coordination of phosphonates versus carboxylates, this change extends the pH range for retention of incorporated ligands. The difference in coordination strength can be exploited to achieve stepwise incorporation of pairs of ligands-specifically, phosphonates species followed by carboxylate species-without danger of displacement of the first ligand type by the second. Diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier-transform spectroscopy suggests that the phosphonate ligands are connected to the MOF node as RPO2(OH)¯ species in a moiety that leaves a base-accessible -OH moiety on each bound phosphonate.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Dynamics and transient absorption spectral signatures of the single-wall carbon nanotube electronically excited triplet state.

Jaehong Park; Pravas Deria; Michael J. Therien

We utilize femtosecond-to-microsecond time domain pump-probe transient absorption spectroscopy to interrogate for the first time the electronically excited triplet state of individualized single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs). These studies exploit (6,5) chirality-enriched SWNT samples and poly[2,6-{1,5-bis(3-propoxysulfonic acid sodium salt)}naphthylene]ethynylene (PNES), which helically wraps the nanotube surface with periodic and constant morphology (pitch length = 10 ± 2 nm), providing a self-assembled superstructure that maintains structural homogeneity in multiple solvents. Spectroscopic interrogation of such PNES-SWNT samples in aqueous and DMSO solvents using E(22) excitation and a white-light continuum probe enables E(11) and E(22) spectral evolution to be monitored concomitantly. Such experiments not only reveal classic SWNT singlet exciton relaxation dynamics and transient absorption signatures but also demonstrate spectral evolution consistent with formation of a triplet exciton state. Transient dynamical studies evince that (6,5) SWNTs exhibit rapid S(1)→T(1) intersystem crossing (ISC) (τ(ISC) ~20 ps), a sharp T(1)→T(n) transient absorption signal (λ(max)(T(1)→T(n)) = 1150 nm; full width at half-maximum ≈ 350 cm(-1)), and a substantial T(1) excited-state lifetime (τ(es) ≈ 15 μs). Consistent with expectations for a triplet exciton state, T(1)-state spectral signatures and T(1)-state formation and decay dynamics for PNES-SWNTs in aqueous and DMSO solvents, as well as those determined for benchmark sodium cholate suspensions of (6,5) SWNTs, are similar; likewise, studies that probe the (3)[(6,5) SWNT]* state in air-saturated solutions demonstrate (3)O(2) quenching dynamics reminiscent of those determined for conjugated aromatic hydrocarbon excited triplet states.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Effect of solvent polarity and electrophilicity on quantum yields and solvatochromic shifts of single-walled carbon nanotube photoluminescence.

Brian A. Larsen; Pravas Deria; Josh M. Holt; Ian N. Stanton; Michael J. Heben; Michael J. Therien; Jeffrey L. Blackburn

In this work, we investigate the impact of the solvation environment on single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) photoluminescence quantum yield and optical transition energies (E(ii)) using a highly charged aryleneethynylene polymer. This novel surfactant produces dispersions in a variety of polar solvents having a wide range of dielectric constants (methanol, dimethyl sulfoxide, aqueous dimethylformamide, and deuterium oxide). Because a common surfactant can be used while maintaining a constant SWCNT-surfactant morphology, we are able to straightforwardly evaluate the impact of the solvation environment upon SWCNT optical properties. We find that (i) the SWCNT quantum yield is strongly dependent on both the polarity and electrophilicity of the solvent and (ii) solvatochromic shifts correlate with the extent of SWCNT solvation. These findings provide a deeper understanding of the environmental dependence of SWCNT excitonic properties and underscore that the solvent provides a tool with which to modulate SWCNT electronic and optical properties.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Electrochemically addressable trisradical rotaxanes organized within a metal–organic framework

Paul R. McGonigal; Pravas Deria; Idan Hod; Peyman Z. Moghadam; Alyssa Jennifer Avestro; Noah E. Horwitz; Ian C. Gibbs-Hall; Anthea K. Blackburn; Dongyang Chen; Youssry Y. Botros; Michael R. Wasielewski; Randall Q. Snurr; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha; J. Fraser Stoddart

Significance This research paper presents a strategy for the organization of artificial molecular switches based on mechanically interlocked molecules within a porous crystalline framework. Once arranged within the pores of the framework, the electronic state of the switches can be altered by the application of an electrochemical potential. This strategy is particularly useful when it comes to integrating dynamic, stimulus-responsive, mechanically interlocked molecules with the robustness and periodicity of porous solids. The findings of the research establish proof-of-concept for the application of postsynthetic transformations of porous crystalline frameworks in the creation of solid-state molecular switches and machines. The organization of trisradical rotaxanes within the channels of a Zr6-based metal–organic framework (NU-1000) has been achieved postsynthetically by solvent-assisted ligand incorporation. Robust ZrIV–carboxylate bonds are forged between the Zr clusters of NU-1000 and carboxylic acid groups of rotaxane precursors (semirotaxanes) as part of this building block replacement strategy. Ultraviolet–visible–near-infrared (UV-Vis-NIR), electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopies all confirm the capture of redox-active rotaxanes within the mesoscale hexagonal channels of NU-1000. Cyclic voltammetry measurements performed on electroactive thin films of the resulting material indicate that redox-active viologen subunits located on the rotaxane components can be accessed electrochemically in the solid state. In contradistinction to previous methods, this strategy for the incorporation of mechanically interlocked molecules within porous materials circumvents the need for de novo synthesis of a metal–organic framework, making it a particularly convenient approach for the design and creation of solid-state molecular switches and machines. The results presented here provide proof-of-concept for the application of postsynthetic transformations in the integration of dynamic molecular machines with robust porous frameworks.

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Wojciech Bury

Warsaw University of Technology

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Idan Hod

Northwestern University

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