Altınçekiç Nazmiye Gökçe, Lander Chance W, Yu Jiaqi, Roslend Ayman, Shao Yihan, Noh Hyunho
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, The University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma 73019, United States.
Department of Chemistry, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, United States.
J Am Chem Soc. 2025 Sep 24;147(38):34777-34790. doi: 10.1021/jacs.5c10498. Epub 2025 Sep 13.
Interfacial charge transfer reactions involving protons and/or electrons are fundamental to heterogeneous catalysis and many other reactions relevant to energy, chemical, and biological sectors. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with redox-active metal-oxo nodes have emerged as candidate materials to examine these reactions with near-atomic-level precision, given their crystalline nature. Here, we employed a colloidally stable, Ti-based MOF, Ti-MIL-125, with different crystal sizes to examine catalytically relevant charge transfer thermodynamics. The Ti(μ-O)(μ-OH) nodes structurally mimic TiO, which has shown some PCET reactivity toward reactions of H, O, and others. In this report, we have demonstrated that a change in crystal size induces different amounts of structural disorder to the Ti-oxo node, further changing the thermodynamics of proton/electron/hydrogen-atom transfer reactions. Using electrochemical open-circuit potential () measurements, we have determined that all crystallites undergo a 1H/1e redox reaction, which, given the stoichiometry, can be considered as a net H atom transfer (HAT) reaction. The thermodynamics of this HAT reaction, the TiO-H bond dissociation free energy (BDFE), was dependent on the crystal size of the MOF, as the decrease in crystal size induced more structural disorder. Our computational calculations have indicated that this difference in BDFE is due to a local change in the geometry of Ti cations, rather than the commonly invoked defects, such as the "missing-linker" defect sites. Individual proton/electron transfer (PT/ET) thermodynamics were also highly dependent on the crystal sizes. These were probed using p or band gaps (), respectively. These findings suggest that, particularly when MOFs are nanosized with a large amount of structural disorder, they should no longer be considered "true" single-site catalysts; this is an implicit, but widespread assumption within the MOF-based catalysis field. Implications of these findings will be contrasted with structurally similar metal oxides like TiO and other redox-active MOFs.
涉及质子和/或电子的界面电荷转移反应是多相催化以及许多与能源、化学和生物领域相关的其他反应的基础。鉴于其晶体性质,具有氧化还原活性金属-氧节点的金属有机框架(MOF)已成为以近原子水平精度研究这些反应的候选材料。在这里,我们使用了具有不同晶体尺寸的胶体稳定的钛基金属有机框架Ti-MIL-125来研究催化相关的电荷转移热力学。Ti(μ-O)(μ-OH)节点在结构上模拟TiO,TiO已显示出对H、O等反应具有一些质子耦合电子转移(PCET)反应活性。在本报告中,我们证明了晶体尺寸的变化会给Ti-氧节点带来不同程度的结构无序,进而改变质子/电子/氢原子转移反应的热力学。通过电化学开路电位()测量,我们确定所有微晶都经历了1H/1e氧化还原反应,根据化学计量,该反应可被视为净氢原子转移(HAT)反应。这种HAT反应的热力学,即TiO-H键解离自由能(BDFE),取决于MOF的晶体尺寸,因为晶体尺寸的减小会导致更多的结构无序。我们的计算表明,BDFE的这种差异是由于Ti阳离子几何结构的局部变化,而不是通常所说的缺陷,如“缺失连接体”缺陷位点。单个质子/电子转移(PT/ET)热力学也高度依赖于晶体尺寸。分别使用p或带隙()对其进行了探测。这些发现表明,特别是当MOF为纳米尺寸且具有大量结构无序时,它们不应再被视为“真正的”单中心催化剂;这是基于MOF的催化领域中一个隐含但普遍存在的假设。这些发现的影响将与结构相似的金属氧化物如TiO和其他氧化还原活性MOF进行对比。