Embodiments of the subject matter disclosed herein generally relate to a metal-organic framework and method for making the same, and more particularly, to a MXene based metal-organic framework and various applications of such a compound.
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have attracted enormous attention in various research fields such as gas storage/separation, sensing, catalysis, etc., due to their advantageous porosity, large surface area, and numerous structural and chemical tunability. However, manipulating conventional bulk MOFs into 2D nanosheets and thin-film form is very challenging, although extremely desired. Having the MOFs manufactured as 2D nanosheets and thin-films advantageously enables new applications in electronics, sensors, and other device applications. In pursuit of such MOF thin films, layer-by-layer and Langmuir-Blodgett techniques have been developed [1-3] for growing the MOF as thin films. However, these protocols require specific surface topologies and/or interfaces, specialized equipment, and skilled multistep operations, which severely restrict the large-scale practical applications [4-7].
Alternatively, tailoring the MOFs themselves into the nanoscale films with controlled growth dimensionalities (e.g., two dimensional, 2D) and architectures are highly desirable as they could meet the specific requirements in the various areas where such MOFs are desired, beyond the bulk MOFs.
In general, MOFs are generated by coordination reactions between soluble inorganic metal salts (e.g., nitrates, chlorides, and acetates) and organic ligands in polar solvents. However, using conventional MOF synthesis methods, one typically has little control over the generation process of the MOFs in terms of the desired dimensionality of such compounds. In pursuit of the well-defined geometrical shape of the MOF crystals, eco-friendly and cost-effective insoluble metal precursors (e.g., metals, metal oxides/hydroxides) have been developed. Among them, some are used as hard templates while some serve simultaneously as sacrificial templates where the parental features could be readily inherited. Yet, the wide utilization of the hard template approach is restricted due to the fact that the precursors are normally anchored to various substrates. In addition, the incomplete conversion of the metal residuals has been observed, leading to inseparable MOF/metal composite species.
Recently, Moran (Moran, C. M.; Joshi, J. N.; Marti, R. M.; Hayes, S. E.; Walton, K. S. Structured Growth of Metal-Organic Framework MIL-53(Al) from Solid Aluminum Carbide Precursor. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2018, 140, 9148-9153) has demonstrated an insoluble metal carbide (Al4C3) precursor that was used to prepare needle-like MIL-53 (Al) MOF crystals. However, the low surface area of the bulk precursor provided limited accessible sites to spatially control the nucleation to form mesoscopic architectures.
Therefore, the existing methods for synthesizing nanoscale MOFs is a highly challenging task because the conventional soluble metal salt precursors are not easy to be manipulated spatially, thus normally leading to bulk MOFs.
Thus, there is a need for a new compound and method for forming the compound so that MOFs with desired shapes and morphologies can be mass produced in industrial settings, without the required highly specialized equipment or fabrication steps.
According to an embodiment, there is a method for making a metal-organic framework, MOF, as nanosheets. The method includes providing a MXene, where the MXene has a general formula of Mn+1XnTx, with n=1-3, M represents an early transition metal, X is C and/or N, and Tx is surface terminations, providing a ligand, mixing the MXene and the ligand in a vessel, heating the MXene and the ligand in the vessel, and forming the MX-MOF nanosheets. The MX-MOF nanosheets have a thickness less than 10 nm.
According to another embodiment, there is an electrochemical cell that includes a housing, an anode located inside the housing, a cathode located inside the housing, and a solid state electrolyte located between the anode and cathode, the solid state electrolyte including a MXene based metal-organic framework, MX-MOF, film. The MX-MOF film includes parallel distributed MX-MOF nanosheets.
According to still another embodiment, there is a transistor that includes a substrate, a semiconductor layer formed on the substrate and patterned to form a source S, a drain D, and a gate G; a MXene based metal-organic framework, MX-MOF, film formed over the source S, drain D, and gate G, and an encapsulation layer formed over the MX-MOF film to confine an ionic transport environment within the MX-MOF film.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The following description of the embodiments refers to the accompanying drawings. The same reference numbers in different drawings identify the same or similar elements. The following detailed description does not limit the invention. Instead, the scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims. The following embodiments are discussed, for simplicity, with regard to a V2CTx MXene precursor for forming the nanoscale MOF sheets. However, the embodiments to be discussed next are not limited to this specific MXene, but other MXene members may be used for forming the desired nanoscale MOF sheets.
Reference throughout the specification to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure or characteristic described in connection with an embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the subject matter disclosed. Thus, the appearance of the phrases “in one embodiment” or “in an embodiment” in various places throughout the specification is not necessarily referring to the same embodiment. Further, the particular features, structures or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments.
According to an embodiment, a MXene is used as a metal precursor to fabricate two dimensional (2D) MOF nanosheets, whose thickness (6 to 18 nm) can be tuned by varying a reaction temperature. The highly electronegative surface atoms of the MXene compound and sufficient accessible attacking sites for ligands are responsible for the evolution of the 2D MOF nanosheets. Moreover, highly oriented and smooth MOF thin films have been grown based on these nanosheets using a convenient spin coating process. With impregnation of nonvolatile H3PO4, the MOF thin film exhibits proton-conducting properties at 25° C. The embodiments discussed next demonstrate that the high-quality 2D MOF sheets and thin films are enabled by the 2D MXene precursors.
MXenes are an emerging group of 2D laminated inorganic transition metal carbides, nitrides, or carbonitrides with a general formula of Mn+1XnTx, with n=1-3, where M represents early transition metals (e.g., Ti, V, etc.), X is C and/or N, and Tx is surface terminations (—F, —O and —OH). To date, over 30 MXenes with wide chemical and structural varieties have been synthesized. It is noteworthy that the terminal atoms on the surface of the MXene, having low work function and high electronegativity, enable them to be strong electron acceptors, which is beneficial for the deprotonation of organic ligands and thus the subsequent bridging with the underlying metal atoms. Meanwhile, the sufficiently accessible surfaces of the atomically thin 2D MXene sheets provide adequate attacking sites for the protonated ligands, which could accelerate the reaction while preserving the underlying 2D topology.
In one embodiment, a V2CTx MXene and a H2TCPP (H2TCPP=meso-tetra(4-carboxyl-phenyl) porphyrin) ligand have been used to generate a novel MOF with 2D nanosheet morphology (V-MOF), which is an analog of Al-MOF [7]. The V2CTx MXene was synthesized by immersing 1 g of V2AlC MAX powder (300 mesh) compound 100, whose chemical structure is illustrated in
Then, a solvothermal method was employed to convert the V2CTx MXene 120 and the ligand H2TCPP 130 into the MOFs, based on the chemical interaction process illustrated in
In this regard,
An accordion-like MXene nanostructure 120 was observed after etching the Al layers out of the densely packed MAX phase 100. The X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern of the MXene 120, shown in
The feasibility of using V2CTx MXene 120 as metal sources/precursor to synthesize MOFs 400 was confirmed by XRD, which is shown in
Meanwhile, the thickness of the V2CTx-MOF sheets 400 can be tuned from 6 to 18 nm by varying the reaction temperature between the MXene 120 and the ligand 130, from 120 to 180° C. In this regard,
Moreover, two distinct peaks (C—NH and C═N—C) were deconvoluted from the N 1s spectrum, implying that no V was located at the center of the porphyrin rings. This was confirmed by the UV-visible absorption spectrum shown in
The nanosheet morphology of the synthesized V2CTx-MOF 400 is suitable for forming thin films, which could open the door for many applications. A spin-coating strategy was adopted in one embodiment to fabricate MOF thin films using a colloidal suspension, for example, V2CTx-MOF in methanol, 1 mg mL−1. The MOF thin films can be constructed on both glasses and flexible plastic substrates with a root mean square roughness of about 9.5 nm and a thickness of about 20 nm while retaining good transparency. UV-vis transmission spectroscopy indicates that the thin films have an obvious peak at around 420 nm, in correspondence with the absorption spectrum, while a high transmittance (75% and 60%, respectively) after 500 nm is observed as noted in
As the center of the porphyrin rings are not metalated, the inner N atoms could serve as acceptors of hydrogen bonds. Thus, nonvolatile H3PO4 enables the solid MOF thin films 500 with potent proton-conducting property by forming hydrogen bond networks within the MOFs. The protonation of the N atoms after acid impregnation can be confirmed by experimental tests and the red-shifted peaks of the Q bands in the UV-visible absorption spectrum shown in
A couple of applications of the novel V2CTx-MOF thin film 500 are now discussed. A first application is related to the electrocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) to form valuable liquid fuels (C1 to C3 products such as formic acid (HCOOH), ethanol, and n-propanol) using renewable energy is a potential strategy to achieve a carbon-neutral energy cycle. These liquid products were usually generated and mixed with solutes in the electrolyte of traditional H- or flow-cell reactors, which requires extra separation and concentration processes to recover pure liquid fuel solutions in practical applications. Taking CO2RR to HCOOH as a representative example, while highly selective (>90%) and active catalysts have been presented in recent works, in most cases the products were actually in the form of formate due to the neutral or alkaline electrolyte environments, as well as in low concentrations. Similarly, the production of electrolyte-free C2+ liquid oxygenate solutions is still an open challenge. Therefore, to directly and continuously produce pure liquid fuel solutions, particularly with high product concentrations and long-term operation, is highly desired for the practical deployment of electrocatalytic CO2RR.
The inventors have found that the V2CTx-MOF thin film 500 can be used as a solid-state electrolyte (SSE) in a CO2RR system to produce electrolyte-free liquid products including HCOOH, acetic acid, ethanol, and n-propanol. According to an embodiment illustrated in
When the CO2 supplied at the cathode 1820, through port 1828, is reduced by a HCOOH-selective catalyst, the generated negatively charged HCOO− 1826 is driven by the electrical field, which is generated between the cathode and the anode when an electrical current is applied by a power source 1840, and the HCOO− 1826 travels through the membrane 1824 towards the middle solid-electrolyte channel. At the same time, protons 1816 generated by water oxidation (the water is supplied at port 1818 or is shared from the inlet 1804, and oxygen evolution reaction, OER, or hydrogen oxidation reaction, HOR, generates the proton from the water) on the anode side can move across the membrane 1814 to compensate the charge. Depending on the type of solid ion-conducting electrolyte 1830 in between, the HCOOH product 1807 could be formed via the ionic recombination of crossed ions at either the left (H+-conductor) or right (HCOO−-conductor) interface between the middle channel and membrane, and diffuse away through the liquid water to the output 1806. Then, the formed liquid products can be quickly released by the slow deionized water stream or humidified inert gas flow. Pure HCOOH solution with a wide range of concentrations can be produced by adjusting the flow rate of the deionized water or gas 1805.
In another application, the V2CTx-MOF thin film 500 can be used in iontronics applications, as this material shows high quality, chemical stability, and capability to support standard device patterning processes, e.g., dry etching, optical beam lithography, electron beam lithography. lontronics is a recently emerging interdisciplinary concept, which is based on an electrochemical transistor platform using a gate electric field to control the interaction between ionic and electronic transport behaviors. One of the possible device architectures is the electric double-layer (EDL) transistor. The EDL is formed at the interface between an electrolyte (ionic conductor) and a semiconductor (electron conductor) when an electric field is applied to the gate electrode. During the EDL formation, the electronic current flowing through the semiconductor could be modulated. The inventors have discovered that the MOF solid-state film 500 can be used as an ionically conductive electrolyte in the EDL transistors.
The fabrication process of a MX-MOF (MXene based MOF)/MoS2 EDL transistor is now discussed. The V2CTx MXene 120 discussed above, having atomically thin 2D vanadium carbide with surface functional groups Tx (—F, —OH, and ═O), was utilized as the metal source and soft template for the synthesis of the MX-MOF 2D nanosheets 400. Using the MXene and commercial H2TCPP (H2TCPP=meso-tetra(4-carboxyl-phenyl)porphyrin) ligand, the 2D MX-MOF nanosheets 400 were synthesized by using a hydrothermal method. After purification, these nanosheets were dispersed in methanol as a stable suspension. The liquid sample shows a red-violet color, with a concentration of 1 mg/mL (MX-MOF weight/methanol volume). This suspension was used to form the high-quality uniform MX-MOF films 500 by spin-coating.
An attractive feature of this device fabrication process is that the MX-MOF film 500 can be processed through conventional photolithography and dry etching without degradation. The EDL transistor 1930 can be permanently capped with a photoresist layer 1940 after the MX-MOF patterning to keep the stable ionic transport environment within the MX-MOF layer 500. After H3PO4 acid treatment for a certain time, the functioning MX-MOF/MoS2 EDL transistor is finally obtained.
The MX-MOF film 500 is also compatible with standard lithography processes. In this regard, the compatibility of the MX-MOF films with the standard lithography process was evaluated by exposing the film 500 to the chemicals involved in a typical cleanroom fabrication processes. In one experiment, the freshly prepared MX-MOF film 500 was exposed to acetone, isopropanol, DI water, and AZ726 developer solution for 2 min, followed by blow-drying under a nitrogen gun. The MX-MOF film 500 did not exhibit any clear degradation (demonstrated by XRD characterization and digital photos) due to this treatment. In one experiment, the MX-MOF film 500 was placed in acetone and separately in chloroform solutions for 5 h at a holding temperature of 80° C., and the MX-MOF film still retained its pristine morphology. The above experiments demonstrate that the MX-MOF films 500 have sufficient chemical stability for the standard electronic device fabrication processes. Using the UV-light photolithography and plasma-dry-etching process, the inventors successfully patterned the MX-MOF film 500 to have various shapes. The obtained samples show sharp pattern edges indicating the ability to pattern the MX-MOF film by UV photolithography with several-micrometer resolution. In another test, the MX-MOF film was patterned in the form of circle arrays. The specific enlarged single circle pattern indicates that the morphology of the MX-MOF-nanosheet film is well retained. Electron-beam lithography (EBL) was also used to demonstrate the capability to pattern the novel MX-MOF film 500. The optical and SEM images of MX-MOF EBL patterns demonstrate that using the EBL technique to pattern MX-MOF films it is possible to use these materials in nanoelectronics.
Thus, the developed MX-MOF nanosheets 400 find wide applications in multiple fields. The highly electronegative terminal atoms and adequate accessible surfaces of the MXene used to generate the MOF films enable the topological synthesis and fabrication of the MOFs with 2D nanosheet morphology. The as-prepared MOF with 2D nanosheets with tunable thickness could be stacked in a specific orientation to form thin films. The MOF thin films exhibited exceptional uniformity, which is superior to previously reported MOF thin films. The V2CTx-MOF exhibited appealing proton conductivity with acid impregnation, which is promising for electronic, sensing, and electrochemical applications.
A method for making the MOF nanosheets 400 into a MOF film 500 that has substantially a parallel distribution of the MOF nanosheets 400 is now discussed with regard to
The method may further include a step of adding a solvent in the vessel before the heating step, and/or a step of sealing the vessel before the heating step. The step of heating comprises heating between 120 and 180° C. The method may further include a step of drying the MX-MOF nanosheets. In one embodiment, M is Ti or V, X is C and/or N, and Tx is —F, —O and —OH. The method may further includes a step of spin coating the MX-MOF nanosheets on a substrate to form a MX-MOF film having a thickness less than 400 nm, and/or a step of impregnating the MX-MOF nanosheets with a non-volatile acid to enable proton-conducting properties in the MX-MOF nanosheets.
In one application, the method may also include placing the MX-MOF nanosheets, in solid state, between a cathode and an anode of a cell, supplying CO2 to the cell, and applying electrical energy between the cathode and anode to transform the CO2 into fuel. In another embodiment, the method may further include a step of applying the MX-MOF nanosheets between a source, a drain, and a gate deposited on a substrate to form an electric double-layer (EDL) transistor, where the EDL is formed at an interface between a ionic conductor and a semiconductor, where the MX-MOF nanosheets are the ionic conductor and the drain and gate are the semiconductor.
The disclosed embodiments provide a method for manufacturing a MOF thin film based on a MXene. It should be understood that this description is not intended to limit the invention. On the contrary, the embodiments are intended to cover alternatives, modifications and equivalents, which are included in the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Further, in the detailed description of the embodiments, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a comprehensive understanding of the claimed invention. However, one skilled in the art would understand that various embodiments may be practiced without such specific details.
Although the features and elements of the present embodiments are described in the embodiments in particular combinations, each feature or element can be used alone without the other features and elements of the embodiments or in various combinations with or without other features and elements disclosed herein.
This written description uses examples of the subject matter disclosed to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the same, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the subject matter is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims.
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This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/930,043, filed on Nov. 4, 2019, entitled “MXENE-DERIVED METAL-ORGANIC FRAMEWORKS AND THEIR APPLICATION IN ELECTROCATALYTIC CO2 REDUCTION,” the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/060000 | 10/23/2020 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62930043 | Nov 2019 | US |