1 / 41

Ion pairing in clusters and ion transport in porous nanocapsules

Ion pairing in clusters and ion transport in porous nanocapsules. Controlling complex function in polyoxometalate-based systems. Craig L. Hill and Group M. Khaled Sarker Emory University A. Merca, H. B ögge, M. Schmidtmann, A. Müller. Functional nanosystems composed of fundamental units.

holland
Download Presentation

Ion pairing in clusters and ion transport in porous nanocapsules

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ion pairing in clusters and ion transport in porous nanocapsules Controlling complex function in polyoxometalate-based systems Craig L. Hill and Group M. Khaled Sarker Emory University A. Merca, H. Bögge, M. Schmidtmann, A. Müller

  2. Functional nanosystems composed of fundamental units Synthetic units: synthons Structural units: tectons Catalytic units: ? Sensing units: ? Other macro, micro or nanofunction units • Incorporate functionality into the building blocks

  3. Structural units (building blocks) in nanospheres and nanorings

  4. POM-based detection and catalytic O2/air-based oxidation POMox substrate • pollutants (environment) • toxins (protection) • biological targets (medical applications) tunable extremely selective 1/2 O2 oxidized product POMred POM Net rxn: substrate + O2 oxidized product (catalyst) d1 delocalized => very intense IVCT transitions

  5. Selective O2-based organic oxidations Okun, N. M.; Anderson, T. M.; Hill, C. L. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2003, 125, 3194. Enantiopure POMs Fang, X.; Anderson, T. M.; Hill, C. L. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.2005, 44, 3540 (feature article) Noble metal-oxo compounds & O2-based oxidations Science, 2004, 306, 2074. J. Am. Chem. Soc.2005, 127, 11948. Catalytic units for functional materials

  6. 2- L L linker linker L L Oxygen Vanadium Sensing and catalytic units in POM-based materials

  7. 2- M(NO3)2 + M2+ = Mn2+, Co2+, Ni2+, or Zn2+ [M(H2O)2(DMF)2{4-pyV6}] Oxygen Vanadium Vanadium Oxygen Nitrogen Carbon M 2+ J.-W. Han, K. I. Hardcastle, C. L. Hill, EJIC, 2006, 2598-2603 POM-based network color change sensor and catalyst Pores not large enough for effective sensing and catalysis !

  8. Carboxylate-terminated triesterified {V6O19} 2 - (TBA)2 (TBA)3[H3V10O28] + DMA, 85 °C, 22h under O2 Yield: 29% (based on vanadium) TBA = (n-C4H9)4N

  9. 2 - (TBA)2 o m Pure by 1H and 51V NMR: TBA = (n-C4H9)4N * S water CH2OV * S: DMSO-d6 D: DMF : (n-C4H9)4N * * D D CH2N o m D

  10. Formation of catalytic & sensing MOF 2 - 1.1 Ln(NO3)3 + DMA or DMF (10 mM) (Ln = Gd, Tb, or Yb) TBA salt in DMF (10 mM) stir 1h slow MeOH diffusion; 5 days Yield of MOF = 60-70 % based on (HOOC-tris)2V6 unit)

  11. X-ray structure of giant-pore detecting & catalytic material based on bis(triester)V6 units POM (V6) units detect and catalyze air-based oxidations 28.6 Å Ln2(OOCR)4 units catalyze hydrolysis; Detect by emission quenching These two-dimensional (2D) coordination layers are linked by hydrogen bonds to form three-dimensional porous structure.

  12. Pores of detecting, catalytic nanomaterial

  13. nanocapsules: things of beauty Goal: to understand all their physico- chemical & dynamic properties Insights from and into Nature Do they have uses? (function + beauty) Achim Müller  W. H. Casey, J. R. Rustad MM code developed by JRR

  14. Towards understanding POM reactivity clarify Dynamics: kinetics & mechanism meaningful creative design of functional POMs & POM materials • ion pairing stoichiometry K values • protonation, • geometric structure,• electronic structure, • reduction potentials, • other thermodynamic properties experimental & computational

  15. Nanocapsule counterion chemistry • Ih point group: 12 C5, 12 C52, 12 S10, 12 S103 20 C3, 20 S6 15 C2, 15, i Internal (SO4K)5 rings lower symmetry AM pict.

  16. Arrangement of cations in Mo72V30 Cations have D5d point group symmetry

  17. Arrangement of cations in keplerates Cations have icosahedral symmetry in a regular keplerate

  18. Al3+-capped “large ball” keplerate (Mo2 linkers) [(CH3)2NH2]54Al6{(MoVI)MoVI5O21(H2O)6}12{MoV2O4(SO4)}30]·250H2O X-ray (Bögge): Ten Al3+ bound to outsides of pores; none located inside Myriad challenges: Fractional occupany, position disorder, etc. Merca, H. Bögge, M. Schmidtmann, A. Müller

  19. known location possible internal location Al3+ binding to nanocapsule • Al3+ not located but sulfates suggest location near C3 • Al3+ bound outside pores by H bonds (2.6 – 3.2 Å) • Low occupancy; positional disorder -- refinement continuing • (Bögge, Merca) D. Rehder, A. Müller, co-workers: Li NMR

  20. 27Al NMR spectra before and after excess Al3+ freely diffusing [Al(H2O)6]3+ after before

  21. 27Al NMR experimental • 27Al NMR spectra collected at 156.2 MHz on a Varian UNITY 600 MHz spectrometer. • External standard = aluminum nitrate solution (1.1 mol/kg) • [Al(H2O)6]3+ = 0 ppm • NMR spectra were processed using NUTS (by Acorn NMR Inc.), MS Excel and Varian NMR software. • Deconvoluted spectra were used to calculate peak areas.

  22. spectrum acquisition • Keplerate (50 mg) was dissolved in 0.75 ml D2O • Almost saturated solution • AlW12 (20 mg) added as reference • T1 ~ 0.1 s at 55C, increases with temperature • Magnetization recovery delay (d1)=0.5 s • 5x T1 to allow linear response • Probe tuned to sample for further signal enhancement • 1024 scans for high resolution spectra • Acquisition time 30 min (for high res) • Temperature 23C - 55C

  23. T1 relaxation T1, spin-lattice relaxation time, the rate at which magnetization recovers in the z axis •  = 2e2qzzQ/h •  = (yy-xx)/zz asymmetry parameter • c = correlation time

  24. Many other sources of error • Acquisition time • Spectra take 2- 5 minutes to acquire, thus producing a snapshot that is an average of a changing spectrum • Spectrum noise • Shortened acquisition time results in higher noise • High resolution spectra take 15-30 minutes to acquire

  25. Effect of temperature on 27Al NMR spectrum Linewidth increases with temperature (characteristic of [Al(H2O)6]3+) 23 C 55 C

  26. Effect of removal of Al3+ Selective binding of [Al(H2O)6]3+ using 2-hydroxypyridine-N-oxide (pyrh) -- same chem shift [Al(H2O)5(OH)]2+

  27. 1.5 ppm • freely diffusing • Removed first by chelator • Increases on addition of Al3+ • Chemical shift • Linewidth • ~0 ppm • Internal • Removed last by chelator • Chemical shift lowered by binding to sulfate • 16.5 ppm • capping outside of pore • Removed second by excess chelator • Asymmetry tends to increase • chemical shift Evidence for peak assignments T = 55 C

  28. Temperature dependence of 27Al NMR peak integrals • Constant reference • Peak areas are slightly dependent of temperature

  29. Variation of NMR spectrum of keplerate with temperature 23 C 56 C 23 C

  30. Sample integrity: 27Al peak position with temperature • Temperature-dependent chemical shifts are reversible • Thus, sample is stable during changes in temperature

  31. + Al3+ Al3+-capped nanocapsules in solution keplerate Al3+ + Al3+ Al3+ pore-capping internal free Full kinetic model very difficult: impact of one Al3+ association on others, etc., etc.

  32. Equilibrium constants Al3+ + P [Al (P)]3+ Al3+(P) + I P + [Al (I)]3+

  33. Temperature dependence of equilibrium constants

  34. Temperature dependence of G

  35. Ho and So (approx.) for Al3+/nanocapsule • Al3+(free) Al3+(pore) • S = 130 J mol-1 K-1 • H = -20 kJ mol-1 • Al3+(pore) Al3+(internal) • S = 19 J mol-1 K-1 • H = 4.7 kJ mol-1 Favorable entropy and enthalpy associated with cation binding to outside of pore Energy is required to take cation into the keplerate (unfovaorable electrostatic repulsion?)

  36. Removal of pore-capping aluminum cations by 2-hydroxypyridine-N-oxide Pore-capping Al3+ is removed Free Al3+ is restored Temp = 55 C

  37. Determination of rate of removal of porecapping aluminum cations

  38. Determination of rate of removal of porecapping aluminum cations

  39. Removal of pore-capping aluminum cations by 2-hydroxypyridine-N-oxide

  40. Rate of removal of pore-capping Al3+ • Relatively slow rate of exchange with freely diffusing Al3+ in solution • Rates increase with temperature as expected • Rates calculated vary from ~2 X 10-2 s-1 at 55 °C ~6 X 10-4 s-1 at 40 °C

  41. Thank You • Questions?

More Related