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A theoretical study of metal-organic frameworks

Among the options for carbon sequestration, the development of CO2 capture materials has gained momentum over the past two decades. The design and construction of chemical and physical absorbents for the capture of CO2 and clean energy storage are a crucial technology for a sustainable low-carbon fu...

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Main Author: Zwane, Reabetswe Robin
Other Authors: Venter, Gerhard
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Chemistry 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Zwane, Reabetswe Robin
author2 Venter, Gerhard
author_browse Venter, Gerhard
Zwane, Reabetswe Robin
author_facet Venter, Gerhard
Zwane, Reabetswe Robin
author_sort Zwane, Reabetswe Robin
collection Thesis
description Among the options for carbon sequestration, the development of CO2 capture materials has gained momentum over the past two decades. The design and construction of chemical and physical absorbents for the capture of CO2 and clean energy storage are a crucial technology for a sustainable low-carbon future. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) provide a new vision for the adsorption of molecules on solid surfaces. The interest in MOFs is owed to their ultrahigh porosity, high surface areas and tuneable pore sizes and shapes. The main objective of this thesis was to adopt a rational predictive capacity used in MOF design to control properties such as framework porosity and flexibility on a molecular scale. The in-silico studies were carried out by using ab initio quantum mechanical approaches such as density functional theory and perturbation theory. In addition, semi-classical methods like the Grand Canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) approach was also used. A structural motif called vicinal fluorination was adopted to study MOF linkers in isolation and in a framework. An extensive conformational study, in various solvents, was carried out to investigate the effect of vicinal fluorination on the isolated MOF linkers and therefore elucidate their conformational stability. The effect of fluorination on adsorption isotherms was also investigated. Moreover, various fluorination patterns were explored. Adsorption isotherms of a non-fluorinated copperbased MOF based on experimental work, and its various fluorinated analogues were predicted using the GCMC method. It was found that vicinal fluorination is not dominant in controlling conformations of some MOF linkers. Rather, an interplay of interactions, including solute and steric interactions, influence the conformational stability on rotational profiles. However, vicinal fluorination was shown to control the flexibility of the linkers used in MOFs as it controls the force constants around the minima of rotational profiles of isolated MOF linkers. The study also highlighted the importance of the solvent on the relative energies of the linker conformations – this has a potential impact on the synthesis of MOFs. With the help of computational methods and validation from experimental data, the structural and sorption properties of the framework, upon fluorination, were shown to have consequences on the adsorption properties of the MOF. Vicinally fluorinated frameworks were shown to have higher uptakes at a low temperature and low pressures.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:57.328Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Chemistry
publisherStr Department of Chemistry
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30965 A theoretical study of metal-organic frameworks Zwane, Reabetswe Robin Venter, Gerhard Oliver, Clive Wilkinson, Karl Chemistry Among the options for carbon sequestration, the development of CO2 capture materials has gained momentum over the past two decades. The design and construction of chemical and physical absorbents for the capture of CO2 and clean energy storage are a crucial technology for a sustainable low-carbon future. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) provide a new vision for the adsorption of molecules on solid surfaces. The interest in MOFs is owed to their ultrahigh porosity, high surface areas and tuneable pore sizes and shapes. The main objective of this thesis was to adopt a rational predictive capacity used in MOF design to control properties such as framework porosity and flexibility on a molecular scale. The in-silico studies were carried out by using ab initio quantum mechanical approaches such as density functional theory and perturbation theory. In addition, semi-classical methods like the Grand Canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) approach was also used. A structural motif called vicinal fluorination was adopted to study MOF linkers in isolation and in a framework. An extensive conformational study, in various solvents, was carried out to investigate the effect of vicinal fluorination on the isolated MOF linkers and therefore elucidate their conformational stability. The effect of fluorination on adsorption isotherms was also investigated. Moreover, various fluorination patterns were explored. Adsorption isotherms of a non-fluorinated copperbased MOF based on experimental work, and its various fluorinated analogues were predicted using the GCMC method. It was found that vicinal fluorination is not dominant in controlling conformations of some MOF linkers. Rather, an interplay of interactions, including solute and steric interactions, influence the conformational stability on rotational profiles. However, vicinal fluorination was shown to control the flexibility of the linkers used in MOFs as it controls the force constants around the minima of rotational profiles of isolated MOF linkers. The study also highlighted the importance of the solvent on the relative energies of the linker conformations – this has a potential impact on the synthesis of MOFs. With the help of computational methods and validation from experimental data, the structural and sorption properties of the framework, upon fluorination, were shown to have consequences on the adsorption properties of the MOF. Vicinally fluorinated frameworks were shown to have higher uptakes at a low temperature and low pressures. 2020-02-10T13:29:13Z 2020-02-10T13:29:13Z 2018 2020-01-29T12:58:29Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30965 eng application/pdf Department of Chemistry Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Chemistry
Zwane, Reabetswe Robin
A theoretical study of metal-organic frameworks
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A theoretical study of metal-organic frameworks
title_full A theoretical study of metal-organic frameworks
title_fullStr A theoretical study of metal-organic frameworks
title_full_unstemmed A theoretical study of metal-organic frameworks
title_short A theoretical study of metal-organic frameworks
title_sort theoretical study of metal organic frameworks
topic Chemistry
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30965
work_keys_str_mv AT zwanereabetswerobin atheoreticalstudyofmetalorganicframeworks
AT zwanereabetswerobin theoreticalstudyofmetalorganicframeworks