Article:
Metal-organic frameworks as catalysts:
the role of metal active sites
P. Valvekens, F. Vermoortele, and D. De Vos, Catal. Sci. Technol.,3, 1435-1445 (2013).
The authors present a brief review of various roles MOFs can
play in catalysis, highlighting their potential over other nanoporous materials
in applications involving encapsulation of catalysts in pores and in having
catalytically active metal nodes, while finding that other classes of nanoporous
materials are likely preferable for embedding of metallic nanoparticles and
post-synthetic modification. The focus
of this review, however, is on catalytically active metal sites in MOFs.
The authors present a selection of cases of MOFs having catalytic
activity for a variety of reactions in which the metal nodes of MOFs are
thought to play an active role.
Ultimately, they identify a number of unique mechanisms that are able to
impart catalytic activity at metal sites within MOFs. Coordinatively unsaturated sites (open-metal
sites), selective substitution of metal-bound linkers by incoming nucleophilic
reactants, local coordination destruction with formation of hydroxyl groups,
reversible expansion of the coordination sphere, missing link defects, and
termination of the lattice in a surface have all been given as reasons for
catalytic activity in MOFs.
All of these mechanisms depend upon the metal site, and all
of them depend upon the ability of molecules to interact with the metal
site. While some depend upon the
existence of a coordinatively unsaturated metal site (whether from the crystal
structure and activation or through defects), others involve the guest
molecules inducing the decoordination of the linker from the metal site through
preferential binding of the guest molecule.
There are two primary points from this article that I think
are of high interest to this EFRC.
First, this supports the notion that metal sites, whether coordinatively
unsaturated or fully saturated, are likely sites for attack and destruction of
MOFs by strongly binding guest molecules and potentially acid gases. This point is intuitive, but this article
provides some specific examples of this phenomenon from the literature. Second, it highlights the role of defects (both
point bulk defects and surfaces) in MOF activity for catalysis.