Subhadip Goswami
Northwestern University
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Accounts of Chemical Research | 2017
Timur Islamoglu; Subhadip Goswami; Zhanyong Li; Ashlee J. Howarth; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are periodic, hybrid, atomically well-defined porous materials that typically form by self-assembly and consist of inorganic nodes (metal ions or clusters) and multitopic organic linkers. MOFs as a whole offer many intriguing properties, including ultrahigh porosity, tunable chemical functionality, and low density. These properties point to numerous potential applications, including gas storage, chemical separations, catalysis, light harvesting, and chemical sensing, to name a few. Reticular chemistry, or the linking of molecular building blocks into predetermined network structures, has been employed to synthesize thousands of MOFs. Given the vast library of candidate nodes and linkers, the number of potentially synthetically accessible MOFs is enormous. Nevertheless, a powerful complementary approach to obtain specific structures with desired chemical functionality is to modify known MOFs after synthesis. This approach is particularly useful when incorporation of particular chemical functionalities via direct synthesis is challenging or impossible. The challenges may stem from limited stability or solubility of precursors, unwanted secondary reactivity of precursors, or incompatibility of functional groups with the conditions needed for direct synthesis. MOFs can be postsynthetically modified by replacing the metal nodes and/or organic linkers or via functionalization of the metal nodes and/or organic linkers. Here we describe some of our efforts toward the development and application of postsynthetic strategies for imparting desired chemical functionalities in MOFs of known topology. The techniques include methods for functionalizing MOF nodes, i.e., solvent-assisted ligand incorporation (SALI) and atomic layer deposition in MOFs (AIM) as well as a method to replace structural linkers, termed solvent-assisted linker exchange (SALE), also known as postsynthethic exchange (PSE). For each functionalization strategy, we first describe its chemical basis along with the requirements for its successful implementation. We then present a small number of examples, with an emphasis on those that (a) convey the underlying concepts and/or (b) lead to functional structures (e.g., catalysts) that would be difficult or impossible to access via direct routes. The examples, however, are only illustrative, and a significant body of work exists from both our lab and others, especially for the SALE/PSE strategy. We refer readers to the papers cited and to the references therein. More exciting, in our view, will be new examples and new applications of the functionalization strategies-especially applications made possible by creatively combining the strategies. Underexplored (again, in our view) are implementations that impart electrical conductivity, enable increasingly selective chemical sensing, or facilitate cascade catalysis. It will be interesting to see where these strategies and others take this compelling field over the next few years.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Chung-Wei Kung; Ken-Ichi Otake; Cassandra T. Buru; Subhadip Goswami; Yuexing Cui; Joseph T. Hupp; Alexander M. Spokoyny; Omar K. Farha
Nickel(IV) bis(dicarbollide) is incorporated in a zirconium-based metal-organic framework (MOF), NU-1000, to create an electrically conductive MOF with mesoporosity. All the nickel bis(dicarbollide) units are located as guest molecules in the microporous channels of NU-1000, which permits the further incorporation of other active species in the remaining mesopores. For demonstration, manganese oxide is installed on the nodes of the electrically conductive MOF. The electrochemically addressable fraction and specific capacitance of the manganese oxide in the conductive framework are more than 10 times higher than those of the manganese oxide in the parent MOF.
Nature Communications | 2018
Peyman Z. Moghadam; Timur Islamoglu; Subhadip Goswami; Jason Exley; Marcus Fantham; Clemens F. Kaminski; Randall Q. Snurr; Omar K. Farha; David Fairen-Jimenez
Current advances in materials science have resulted in the rapid emergence of thousands of functional adsorbent materials in recent years. This clearly creates multiple opportunities for their potential application, but it also creates the following challenge: how does one identify the most promising structures, among the thousands of possibilities, for a particular application? Here, we present a case of computer-aided material discovery, in which we complete the full cycle from computational screening of metal–organic framework materials for oxygen storage, to identification, synthesis and measurement of oxygen adsorption in the top-ranked structure. We introduce an interactive visualization concept to analyze over 1000 unique structure–property plots in five dimensions and delimit the relationships between structural properties and oxygen adsorption performance at different pressures for 2932 already-synthesized structures. We also report a world-record holding material for oxygen storage, UMCM-152, which delivers 22.5% more oxygen than the best known material to date, to the best of our knowledge.The emergence of thousands of metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) has created the challenge of finding promising structures for particular applications. Here, the authors present a tool for computer-aided material discovery where a large number of MOFs are screened, with the top-ranked structure synthesized for oxygen storage applications.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Subhadip Goswami; Claire E. Miller; Jenna L. Logsdon; Cassandra T. Buru; Yi Lin Wu; David N. Bowman; Timur Islamoglu; Abdullah M. Asiri; Christopher J. Cramer; Michael R. Wasielewski; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha
Here we describe the synthesis of two Zr-based benzothiadiazole- and benzoselenadiazole-containing metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) for the selective photocatalytic oxidation of the mustard gas simulant, 2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide (CEES). The photophysical properties of the linkers and MOFs are characterized by steady-state absorption and emission, time-resolved emission, and ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy. The benzoselenadiazole-containing MOF shows superior catalytic activity compared to that containing benzothiadiazole with a half-life of 3.5 min for CEES oxidation to nontoxic 2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfoxide (CEESO). Transient absorption spectroscopy performed on the benzoselenadiazole linker reveals the presence of a triplet excited state, which decays with a lifetime of 9.4 μs, resulting in the generation of singlet oxygen for photocatalysis. This study demonstrates the effect of heavy chalcogen substitution within a porous framework for the modulation of photocatalytic activity.
Accounts of Chemical Research | 2018
Timur Islamoglu; Subhadip Goswami; Zhanyong Li; Ashlee J. Howarth; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp
W listed an incorrect grant number and incorrectly ordered grant numbers in the Acknowledgments section of our Account. The correct acknowledgment appears below. We gratefully acknowledge the contributions of co-workers and colleagues whose names are listed as co-authors in the papers cited. The work described was supported by the DOE Separations and Analysis Program (SALE and SALI development), the DOE Solar Photochemistry Program (SALE and SALI studies related to energy and charge transport), the ANSER Center, an Energy Frontier Research Center (AIM for solar-fuels-related applications), the Inorganometallic Catalyst Design Center, an Energy Frontier Research Center (AIM for other catalysis applications), funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science (Awards DE-FG02−08ER15967, DE-FG02−87ER13808, DE-SC0001059, and DE-SC0012702, respectively), and Northwestern University.
ACS Catalysis | 2017
Martino Rimoldi; Ashlee J. Howarth; Matthew R. DeStefano; Lu Lin; Subhadip Goswami; Peng Li; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Subhadip Goswami; Lin Ma; Alex B. F. Martinson; Michael R. Wasielewski; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp
Langmuir | 2016
Yasemin Çimen; Aaron W. Peters; Jason R. Avila; William L. Hoffeditz; Subhadip Goswami; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp
Chemical Science | 2018
Subhadip Goswami; Debmalya Ray; Ken Ichi Otake; Chung-Wei Kung; Sergio J. Garibay; Timur Islamoglu; Ahmet Atilgan; Yuexing Cui; Christopher J. Cramer; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp
Chemistry of Materials | 2018
Subhadip Goswami; Jordan N. Nelson; Timur Islamoglu; Yi Lin Wu; Omar K. Farha; Michael R. Wasielewski