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Role of Surface Oxidation in the Dehydrogenation of Complex Metal Hydrides

White, James L.; Rowberg, Andrew J.; Wan, Liwen F.; Kang, ShinYoung K.; Ogitsu, Tadashi O.; Kolasinski, Robert K.; Whaley, Josh A.; Wang, Timothy C.; Baker, Alexander A.; Lee, Jonathan R.; Liu, Yi-Sheng L.; Guo, Jinghua G.; Stavila, Vitalie S.; Prendergast, David P.; Bluhm, Hendrik B.; Allendorf, Mark D.; Wood, Brandon C.; El Gabaly Marquez, Farid E.

Abstract not provided.

HyMARC (Core): SNL Effort

Allendorf, Mark D.

Storage of hydrogen onboard vehicles is one of the critical technologies needed to create hydrogen-fueled transportation systems that can improve energy efficiency, resiliency, and energy independence reduce oil dependency. Stakeholders in developing hydrogen infrastructure (e.g., state governments, automotive original equipment manufacturers, station providers, and industrial gas suppliers) are currently focused on high-pressure storage at 350 bar and 700 bar, in part because no viable solid-phase storage material has emerged. Early-state research to develop foundational understanding of solid-state storage materials, including novel sorbents and highdensity hydrides, is of high importance because of their unique potential to meet all DOE Fuel Cell Technologies Office targets and deliver hydrogen with lower storage pressures and higher onboard densities. However, existing materials suffer from thermodynamic and kinetic limitations that prevent their application as practical H2 storage media. Sandia's overall objectives and responsibilities within HyMARC are to: (1) provide technical leadership to the Consortium at the Director level, as well as through leadership of Task 1 (Thermodynamics), Task 3 (Gas Surface Interactions), and Task 5 (Additives); (2) provide gas sorption and other property data required to develop and validate thermodynamic models of sorbents and metal hydride storage materials, including the effects of 350 bar and 700 bar H2 delivery pressures, serving as a resource for the consortium; (3) identify the structure, composition, and reactivity of gas surface and solid-solid hydride surfaces contributing to ratelimiting desorption and uptake; (4) provide metal hydrides and Metal-Organic Framework (MOF) sorbents in a variety of formats tailored for specific consortium tasks; (5) develop sample preparation methods and experimental protocols to enable facile use of the new characterization probes employed by the Consortium; (6) apply SNL multiscale codes to discover diffusion pathways and mechanisms of storage materials; and (7) elucidate the role of additives in promoting hydrogen storage reactions.

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Mechanical Properties in Metal–Organic Frameworks: Emerging Opportunities and Challenges for Device Functionality and Technological Applications

Advanced Materials

Burtch, Nicholas C.; Heinen, Jurn; Bennett, Thomas D.; Dubbeldam, David; Allendorf, Mark D.

Some of the most remarkable recent developments in metal–organic framework (MOF) performance properties can only be rationalized by the mechanical properties endowed by their hybrid inorganic–organic nanoporous structures. While these characteristics create intriguing application prospects, the same attributes also present challenges that will need to be overcome to enable the integration of MOFs with technologies where these promising traits can be exploited. In this review, emerging opportunities and challenges are identified for MOF-enabled device functionality and technological applications that arise from their fascinating mechanical properties. This is discussed not only in the context of their more well-studied gas storage and separation applications, but also for instances where MOFs serve as components of functional nanodevices. Recent advances in understanding MOF mechanical structure–property relationships due to attributes such as defects and interpenetration are highlighted, and open questions related to state-of-the-art computational approaches for quantifying their mechanical properties are critically discussed.

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Hybrid Polymer/Metal-Organic Framework Films for Colorimetric Water Sensing over a Wide Concentration Range

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Ullman, Andrew M.; Jones, Christopher G.; Doty, F.P.; Stavila, Vitalie S.; Talin, A.A.; Allendorf, Mark D.

Because of their extraordinary surface areas and tailorable porosity, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have the potential to be excellent sensors of gas-phase analytes. MOFs with open metal sites are particularly attractive for detecting Lewis basic atmospheric analytes, such as water. Here, we demonstrate that thin films of the MOF HKUST-1 can be used to quantitatively determine the relative humidity (RH) of air using a colorimetric approach. HKUST-1 thin films are spin-coated onto rigid or flexible substrates and are shown to quantitatively determine the RH within the range of 0.1-5% RH by either visual observation or a straightforward optical reflectivity measurement. At high humidity (>10% RH), a polymer/MOF bilayer is used to slow the transport of H2O to the MOF film, enabling quantitative determination of RH using time as the distinguishing metric. Finally, the sensor is combined with an inexpensive light-emitting diode light source and Si photodiode detector to demonstrate a quantitative humidity detector for low humidity environments.

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Identifying the Role of Dynamic Surface Hydroxides in the Dehydrogenation of Ti-Doped NaAlH4

Proposed for publication

White, James L.; Rowberg, Andrew J.; Wan, Liwen F.; Kang, ShinYoung K.; Ogitsu, Tadashi O.; Kolasinski, Robert K.; Whaley, Josh A.; Baker, Alexander A.; Lee, Jonathan R.; Liu, Yi-Sheng L.; Trotochaud, Lena T.; Guo, Jinghua G.; Stavila, Vitalie S.; Prendergast, David P.; Bluhm, Hendrik B.; Allendorf, Mark D.; Wood, Brandon C.; El Gabaly Marquez, Farid E.

Abstract not provided.

Effect of Solvent and Substrate on the Surface Binding Mode of Carboxylate-Functionalized Aromatic Molecules

Journal of Physical Chemistry C

Domenico, Janna; Foster, Michael E.; Spoerke, Erik D.; Allendorf, Mark D.; Sohlberg, Karl

The efficiency of dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) is strongly influenced by dye molecule orientation and interactions with the substrate. Understanding the factors controlling the surface orientation of sensitizing organic molecules will aid in the improvement of both traditional DSSCs and other devices that integrate molecular linkers at interfaces. Here, we describe a general approach to understand relative dye-substrate orientation and provide analytical expressions predicting orientation. We consider the effects of substrate, solvent, and protonation state on dye molecule orientation. In the absence of solvent, our model predicts that most carboxylic acid-functionalized molecules prefer to lie flat (parallel) on the surface, due to van der Waals interactions, as opposed to a tilted orientation with respect to the surface that is favored by covalent bonding of the carboxylic acid group to the substrate. When solvation effects are considered, however, the molecules are predicted to orient perpendicular to the surface. We extend this approach to help understand and guide the orientation of metal-organic framework (MOF) thin-film growth on various metal-oxide substrates. A two-part analytical model is developed on the basis of the results of DFT calculations and ab initio MD simulations that predicts the binding energy of a molecule by chemical and dispersion forces on rutile and anatase TiO2 surfaces, and quantifies the dye solvation energy for two solvents. The model is in good agreement with the DFT calculations and enables rapid prediction of dye molecule and MOF linker binding preference on the basis of the size of the adsorbing molecule, identity of the surface, and the solvent environment. We establish the threshold molecular size, governing dye molecule orientation, for each condition.

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Unraveling the Semiconducting/Metallic Discrepancy in Ni3(HITP)2

Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

Foster, Michael E.; Sohlberg, Karl; Allendorf, Mark D.; Talin, A.A.

Ni3(2,3,6,7,10,11-hexaiminotriphenylene)2 is a π-stacked layered metal-organic framework material with extended π-conjugation that is analogous to graphene. Published experimental results indicate that the material is semiconducting, but all theoretical studies to date predict the bulk material to be metallic. Given that previous experimental work was carried out on specimens containing complex nanocrystalline microstructures and the tendency for internal interfaces to introduce transport barriers, we apply DFT to investigate the influence of internal interface defects on the electronic structure of Ni3(HITP)2. The results show that interface defects can introduce a transport barrier by breaking the π-conjugation and/or decreasing the dispersion of the electronic bands near the Fermi level. We demonstrate that the presence of defects can open a small gap, in the range of 15-200 meV, which is consistent with the experimentally inferred hopping barrier.

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Thermally activated delayed fluorescence of a Zr-based metal-organic framework

Chemical Communications

Mieno, H.; Kabe, R.; Allendorf, Mark D.; Adachi, C.

The first metal-organic framework exhibiting thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) was developed. The zirconium-based framework (UiO-68-dpa) uses a newly designed linker composed of a terphenyl backbone, an electron-accepting carboxyl group, and an electron-donating diphenylamine and exhibits green TADF emission with a photoluminescence quantum yield of 30% and high thermal stability.

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Colorimetric Detection of Water Vapor Using Metal-Organic Framework Composites

Allendorf, Mark D.

Purpose: Water vapor trapped in encapsulation materials or enclosed volumes leads to corrosion issues for critical NW components. Sandia National Laboratories has created a new diagnostic to indicate the presence of water in weapon systems. Impact: Component exposure to water now can be determined instantly, without need for costly, time-consuming analytical methods.

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Nanophotonic Atomic Force Microscope Transducers Enable Chemical Composition and Thermal Conductivity Measurements at the Nanoscale

Nano Letters

Chae, Jungseok; An, Sangmin; Ramer, Georg; Stavila, Vitalie S.; Holland, Glenn; Yoon, Yohan; Talin, A.A.; Allendorf, Mark D.; Aksyuk, Vladimir A.; Centrone, Andrea

The atomic force microscope (AFM) offers a rich observation window on the nanoscale, yet many dynamic phenomena are too fast and too weak for direct AFM detection. Integrated cavity-optomechanics is revolutionizing micromechanical sensing; however, it has not yet impacted AFM. Here, we make a groundbreaking advance by fabricating picogram-scale probes integrated with photonic resonators to realize functional AFM detection that achieve high temporal resolution (<10 ns) and picometer vertical displacement uncertainty simultaneously. The ability to capture fast events with high precision is leveraged to measure the thermal conductivity (η), for the first time, concurrently with chemical composition at the nanoscale in photothermal induced resonance experiments. The intrinsic η of metal-organic-framework individual microcrystals, not measurable by macroscale techniques, is obtained with a small measurement uncertainty (8%). The improved sensitivity (50×) increases the measurement throughput 2500-fold and enables chemical composition measurement of molecular monolayer-thin samples. Our paradigm-shifting photonic readout for small probes breaks the common trade-off between AFM measurement precision and ability to capture transient events, thus transforming the ability to observe nanoscale dynamics in materials.

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Molecule@MOF: A New Class of Opto-electronic Materials

Talin, A.A.; Jones, Reese E.; Spataru, Dan C.; Leonard, Francois L.; He, Yuping H.; Foster, Michael E.; Allendorf, Mark D.; Stavila, Vitalie S.

Metal organic frameworks (MOFs) are extended, nanoporous crystalline compounds consisting of metal ions interconnected by organic ligands. Their synthetic versatility suggest a disruptive class of opto - electronic materials with a high degree of electrical tunability and without the property - degrading disorder of organic conductors. In this project we determined the factors controlling charge and energy transport in MOFs and evaluated their potential for thermoelectric energy conversion. Two strategies for a chieving electronic conductivity in MOFs were explored: 1) using redox active 'guest' molecules introduced into the pores to dope the framework via charge - transfer coupling (Guest@MOF), 2) metal organic graphene analogs (MOGs) with dispersive band structur es arising from strong electronic overlap between the MOG metal ions and its coordinating linker groups. Inkjet deposition methods were developed to facilitate integration of the guest@MOF and MOG materials into practical devices.

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Thermoelectric Properties of 2D Ni3(HITP)2 and 3D Cu3(BTC)2 MOFs: First-Principles Studies

ECS Transactions (Online)

He, Yuping H.; Talin, A.A.; Allendorf, Mark D.

Metal organic frameworks (MOFs) have recently attracted great attentions for the thermoelectric (TE) applications, owing to their intrinsic low thermal conductivity, but their TE efficiencies are still low due to the poor electronic transport properties. Here, various synthetic strategies have been designed to optimize the electronic properties of MOFs. Using a series of first principle calculations and band theory, we explore the effect of structural topology and redox matching between the metal and coordinated atoms on the TE transport properties. In conclusion, the presented results provide a fundamental guidance for optimizing electronic charge transport of existing MOFs, and for designing yet to be discovered conductive MOFs for thermoelectric applications.

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Results 51–75 of 216
Results 51–75 of 216