I19-Small Molecule Single Crystal Diffraction
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Open Access
Abstract: We have structurally characterized a number of lithiated calix[4]arenes, where the bridge in the calix[4]arene is thia (–S–, LSH4), sulfinyl (–SO–, LSOH4), sulfonyl (–SO2–, LSO2H4), dimethyleneoxa (–CH2OCH2–, LCOCH4) or methylene (–CH2–, LH4). In the case of L4SH4, interaction with LiOtBu led to the isolation of the complex [Li8(L4S)2(THF)4]·5THF (1·5THF), whilst similar interaction of L4SOH4 led to the isolation of [Li6(L4SOH)2(THF)2]·5(THF) (2·5THF). Interestingly, the mixed sulfinyl/sulfonyl complexes [Li8(calix[4]arene(SO)(SO2)(SO1.68)2)2(THF)6]·8(THF) (3·8THF) and [Li5Na(LSO/3SO2H)2(THF)5]·7.5(THF) (4·7.5(THF) have also been characterized. Interaction of LiOtBu with LSO2H4 and LCOCH4 afforded [Li5L4SO2(OH)(THF)4]·2THF (5·2THF) and [Li6(LCOC)2(HOtBu)2]·0.78THF·1.22hexane (6·0.78THF·1.22hexane), respectively. In the case of LH4, reaction with LiOtBu in THF afforded a monoclinic polymorph [LH2Li2(thf)(OH2)2]·3THF (7·3THF) of a known triclinic form of the complex, whilst reaction of the de-butylated analogue of LH4, namely de-BuLH4, afforded a polymeric chain structure {[Li5(de-BuL)(OH)(NCMe)3]·2MeCN}n (8·2MeCN). For comparative catalytic studies, the complex [Li6(LPr)2(H2O)2]·hexane (9 hexane), where LPr2H2 = 1,3-di-n-propyloxycalix[4]areneH2, was also prepared. The molecular crystal structures of 1–9 are reported, and their ability to act as catalysts for the ring opening (co-)/polymerization (ROP) of the cyclic esters ε-caprolactone, δ-valerolactone, and rac-lactide has been investigated. In most of the cases, complex 6 outperformed the other systems, allowing for higher conversions and/or greated polymer Mn.
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Mar 2021
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B22-Multimode InfraRed imaging And Microspectroscopy
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Xue
Han
,
Wanpeng
Lu
,
Yinlin
Chen
,
Ivan
Da Silva
,
Jiangnan
Li
,
Longfei
Lin
,
Weiyao
Li
,
Alena M.
Sheveleva
,
Harry G. W.
Godfrey
,
Zhenzhong
Lu
,
Floriana
Tuna
,
Eric J. L.
Mcinnes
,
Yongqiang
Cheng
,
Luke L.
Daemen
,
Laura J.
Mccormick Mcpherson
,
Simon J.
Teat
,
Mark D.
Frogley
,
Svemir
Rudic
,
Pascal
Manuel
,
Anibal J.
Ramirez-Cuesta
,
Sihai
Yang
,
Martin
Schroeder
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[23782]
Abstract: Ammonia (NH3) is a promising energy resource owing to its high hydrogen density. However, its widespread application is restricted by the lack of efficient and corrosion-resistant storage materials. Here, we report high NH3 adsorption in a series of robust metal–organic framework (MOF) materials, MFM-300(M) (M = Fe, V, Cr, In). MFM-300(M) (M = Fe, VIII, Cr) show fully reversible capacity for >20 cycles, reaching capacities of 16.1, 15.6, and 14.0 mmol g–1, respectively, at 273 K and 1 bar. Under the same conditions, MFM-300(VIV) exhibits the highest uptake among this series of MOFs of 17.3 mmol g–1. In situ neutron powder diffraction, single-crystal X-ray diffraction, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy confirm that the redox-active V center enables host–guest charge transfer, with VIV being reduced to VIII and NH3 being oxidized to hydrazine (N2H4). A combination of in situ inelastic neutron scattering and DFT modeling has revealed the binding dynamics of adsorbed NH3 within these MOFs to afford a comprehensive insight into the application of MOF materials to the adsorption and conversion of NH3.
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Feb 2021
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B22-Multimode InfraRed imaging And Microspectroscopy
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Jiangnan
Li
,
Zhengyang
Zhou
,
Xue
Han
,
Xinran
Zhang
,
Yong
Yan
,
Weiyao
Li
,
Gemma L.
Smith
,
Yongqiang
Cheng
,
Laura J.
Mcormick Mpherson
,
Simon J.
Teat
,
Mark D.
Frogley
,
Svemir
Rudic
,
Anibal J.
Ramirez-Cuesta
,
Alexander J.
Blake
,
Junliang
Sun
,
Martin
Schroeder
,
Sihai
Yang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22137]
Open Access
Abstract: Structural transitions of host systems in response to guest binding dominate many chemical processes. We report an unprecedented type of structural flexibility within a meta-rigid material, MFM-520, which exhibits a reversible periodic-to-aperiodic structural transition resulting from a drastic distortion of a [ZnO4N] node controlled by the specific host–guest interactions. The aperiodic crystal structure of MFM-520 has no three-dimensional (3D) lattice periodicity but shows translational symmetry in higher-dimensional (3 + 2)D space. We have directly visualized the aperiodic state which is induced by incommensurate modulation of the periodic framework of MFM-520·H2O upon dehydration to give MFM-520. Filling MFM-520 with CO2 and SO2 reveals that, while CO2 has a minimal structural influence, SO2 can further modulate the structure incommensurately. MFM-520 shows exceptional selectivity for SO2 under flue-gas desulfurization conditions, and the facile release of captured SO2 from MFM-520 enabled the conversion to valuable sulfonamide products. MFM-520 can thus be used as a highly efficient capture and delivery system for SO2.
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Oct 2020
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I19-Small Molecule Single Crystal Diffraction
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Abstract: National facilities provide state-of-the-art crystallographic instrumentation and processes and tend to act as an indicator for the direction of a community in the medium term. There has been a significant step up in terms of instrumentation and approach in the last 10 years which has driven data generation. This has had a significant impact on databases – in turn we observe a substantial change in the use of the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD) from relatively basic search/retrieve to gaining deep understanding about factors that govern the solid state. Databases are now able to drive new science in areas such as crystal engineering. Looking forward, we will see more automated pipelining of the data generation process, and this will require better integration with databases. Databases will provide more predictive power – and this will inform the science/crystallography that should be done.
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Oct 2020
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Abstract: Metal chalcogenide compounds have attracted interest as materials for next generation semiconductors, catalysts, and device architectures. Hybrid compounds containing both a metal chalcogenide architecture and a supporting organic lattice combine the interesting structural and electronic properties of the material class with a configurable hybrid component that can lead to a wide range of tailorable materials. However, many of the methods available for preparing inorganic coordination polymers in this class require specialized solution-phase chemical preparations that are incompatible with solid-state fabrication techniques. Here we prepare metal-organic chalcogenolates (MOChas) of copper, indium, lead, and tin from benzeneselenol or benzenethiol directly from the organochalcogen and corresponding metal in a tube furnace at a relatively modest temperature. Scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction confirmed conversion of the precursors to crystalline MOChas. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used to investigate the chemical bonding for each of the materials and provides insight into the elemental composition of the synthesized compounds. This straightforward approach for preparing crystalline hybrid materials may be generalizable for the preparation of a wide variety of coordination compounds and complexes in form factors useful for subsequent development of device architectures.
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Mar 2020
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Open Access
Abstract: Single crystals of the high-pressure phases II and III of pyridine have been obtained by in situ crystallization at 1.09 and 1.69 GPa, revealing the crystal structure of phase III for the first time using X-ray diffraction. Phase II crystallizes in P212121 with Z′ = 1 and phase III in P41212 with Z′ = ½. Neutron powder diffraction experiments using pyridine-d5 establish approximate equations of state of both phases. The space group and unit-cell dimensions of phase III are similar to the structures of other simple compounds with C2v molecular symmetry, and the phase becomes stable at high pressure because it is topologically close-packed, resulting in a lower molar volume than the topologically body-centred cubic phase II. Phases II and III have been observed previously by Raman spectroscopy, but have been mis-identified or inconsistently named. Raman spectra collected on the same samples as used in the X-ray experiments establish the vibrational characteristics of both phases unambiguously. The pyridine molecules interact in both phases through CH⋯π and CH⋯N interactions. The nature of individual contacts is preserved through the phase transition between phases III and II, which occurs on decompression. A combination of rigid-body symmetry mode analysis and density functional theory calculations enables the soft vibrational lattice mode which governs the transformation to be identified.
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Jan 2020
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B22-Multimode InfraRed imaging And Microspectroscopy
I11-High Resolution Powder Diffraction
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Gemma L.
Smith
,
Jennifer E.
Eyley
,
Xue
Han
,
Xinran
Zhang
,
Jiangnan
Li
,
Nicholas M.
Jacques
,
Harry G. W.
Godfrey
,
Stephen P.
Argent
,
Laura J.
Mccormick Mcpherson
,
Simon J.
Teat
,
Yongqiang
Cheng
,
Mark D.
Frogley
,
Gianfelice
Cinque
,
Sarah
Day
,
Chiu C.
Tang
,
Timothy L.
Easun
,
Svemir
Rudic
,
Anibal J.
Ramirez-Cuesta
,
Sihai
Yang
,
Martin
Schroeder
Abstract: Emissions of SO2 from flue gas and marine transport have detrimental impacts on the environment and human health, but SO2 is also an important industrial feedstock if it can be recovered, stored and transported efficiently. Here we report the exceptional adsorption and separation of SO2 in a porous material, [Cu2(L)] (H4L = 4′,4‴-(pyridine-3,5-diyl)bis([1,1′-biphenyl]-3,5-dicarboxylic acid)), MFM-170. MFM-170 exhibits fully reversible SO2 uptake of 17.5 mmol g−1 at 298 K and 1.0 bar, and the SO2 binding domains for trapped molecules within MFM-170 have been determined. We report the reversible coordination of SO2 to open Cu(ii) sites, which contributes to excellent adsorption thermodynamics and selectivities for SO2 binding and facile regeneration of MFM-170 after desorption. MFM-170 is stable to water, acid and base and shows great promise for the dynamic separation of SO2 from simulated flue gas mixtures, as confirmed by breakthrough experiments.
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Oct 2019
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I19-Small Molecule Single Crystal Diffraction
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[18193]
Open Access
Abstract: Seven multi-component molecular crystals containing O–H⋯O/O+–H⋯O− and N+–H⋯O− short strong hydrogen bonds (SSHBs) have been engineered by combining substituted organic acids with hydrogen bond acceptor molecules N,N-dimethylurea and isonicotinamide. In these materials, the shortest of the SSHBs are formed in the N,N-dimethylurea set for the ortho/para nitro-substituted organic acids whilst a twisted molecular approach favours the shorter SSHBs N+–H⋯O− in the isonicotinamide set. Temperature dependent proton migration behaviour has been explored in these systems using single crystal synchrotron X-ray diffraction (SCSXRD). By using a protocol which considers a combination of structural information when assessing the hydrogen atom (H-atom) behaviour, including refined H-atom positions alongside heavy atom geometry and Fourier difference maps, temperature dependent proton migration is indicated in two complexes (2: N,N-dimethylurea 2,4-dinitrobenzoic acid 1:1 and 5: isonicotinamide phthalic acid 2:1). We also implement Hirshfeld atom refinement for further confidence in this observation; this highlights the importance of having corroborating trends when applying the SCSXRD technique in these studies. Further insights into the SSHB donor–acceptor distance limit for temperature dependent proton migration are also revealed. For the O–H⋯O/O+–H⋯O− SSHBs, the systems here support the previously proposed maximum limit of 2.45 Å whilst for the charge assisted N+–H⋯O− SSHBs, a limit in the region of 2.55 Å may be suggested.
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Aug 2019
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I11-High Resolution Powder Diffraction
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Lauren N.
Mchugh
,
Matthew J.
Mcpherson
,
Laura J.
Mccormick
,
Samuel A.
Morris
,
Paul S.
Wheatley
,
Simon J.
Teat
,
David
Mckay
,
Daniel M.
Dawson
,
Charlotte E. F.
Sansome
,
Sharon E.
Ashbrook
,
Corinne A.
Stone
,
Martin W.
Smith
,
Russell E.
Morris
Abstract: Highly porous metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), which have undergone exciting developments over the past few decades, show promise for a wide range of applications. However, many studies indicate that they suffer from significant stability issues, especially with respect to their interactions with water, which severely limits their practical potential. Here we demonstrate how the presence of ‘sacrificial’ bonds in the coordination environment of its metal centres (referred to as hemilability) endows a dehydrated copper-based MOF with good hydrolytic stability. On exposure to water, in contrast to the indiscriminate breaking of coordination bonds that typically results in structure degradation, it is non-structural weak interactions between the MOF’s copper paddlewheel clusters that are broken and the framework recovers its as-synthesized, hydrated structure. This MOF retained its structural integrity even after contact with water for one year, whereas HKUST-1, a compositionally similar material that lacks these sacrificial bonds, loses its crystallinity in less than a day under the same conditions.
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Aug 2018
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I19-Small Molecule Single Crystal Diffraction
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[8803]
Open Access
Abstract: Nine new molecular complexes of the proton sponge 1,8-bis(dimethylamino)naphthalene (DMAN) with substituted benzoic acid co-formers have been engineered with varying component stoichiometries (1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1, 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]2 or 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]3). These complexes are all ionic in nature, following proton transfer between the acid co-former and DMAN; the extracted proton is held by DMAN in all instances in an intramolecular [N–H⋯N]+ hydrogen bond. A number of structural features are common to all complexes and are found to be tunable in a predictable way using systematic acid co-former substitution. These features include charge-assisted hydrogen bonds formed between acid co-formers in hydrogen bonding motifs consistent with complex stoichiometry, and weak hydrogen bonds which facilitate the crystal packing of DMAN and acid co-former components into a regular motif. Possible crystal structure tuning by co-former substitution can aid the rational design of such materials, offering the potential to target solid-state properties that may be influenced by these interactions
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May 2018
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