Anion-Afforded Functions of Ionic Metal-Organic Frameworks: Ionochromism, Anion Conduction, and Catalysis

Inorg Chem. 2022 Jan 17;61(2):902-910. doi: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.1c02741. Epub 2022 Jan 2.

Abstract

The exchangeable counterions in ionic metal-organic frameworks (IMOFs) provide facile and versatile handles to manipulate functions associated with the ionic guests themselves and host-guest interactions. However, anion-exchangeable stable IMOFs combining multiple anion-related functions are still undeveloped. In this work, a novel porous IMOF featuring unique self-penetration was constructed from an electron-deficient tris(pyridinium)-tricarboxylate zwitterionic ligand. The water-stable IMOF undergoes reversible and single-crystal-to-single-crystal anion exchange and shows selective and discriminative ionochromic behaviors toward electron-rich anions owing to donor-acceptor interactions. The IMOFs with different anions are good ionic conductors with low activation energy, the highest conductivity being observed with chloride. Furthermore, integrating Lewis acidic sites and nucleophilic guest anions in solid state, the IMOFs act as heterogeneous and recyclable catalysts to efficiently catalyze the cycloaddition of CO2 to epoxides without needing the use of halide cocatalysts. The catalytic activity is strongly dependent upon the guest anions, and the iodide shows the highest activity. The results demonstrate the great potential of developing IMOFs with various functions related to the guest ions included in the porous matrices.