Journal of Synchrotron Radiation (Mar 2024)

The role of carboxylate ligand orbitals in the breathing dynamics of a metal-organic framework by resonant X-ray emission spectroscopy

  • Ralph Ugalino,
  • Kosuke Yamazoe,
  • Jun Miyawaki,
  • Hisao Kiuchi,
  • Naoya Kurahashi,
  • Yuka Kosegawa,
  • Yoshihisa Harada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600577524000584
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. 2
pp. 217 – 221

Abstract

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Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) exhibit structural flexibility induced by temperature and guest adsorption, as demonstrated in the structural breathing transition in certain MOFs between narrow-pore and large-pore phases. Soft modes were suggested to entropically drive such pore breathing through enhanced vibrational dynamics at high temperatures. In this work, oxygen K-edge resonant X-ray emission spectroscopy of the MIL-53(Al) MOF was performed to selectively probe the electronic perturbation accompanying pore breathing dynamics at the ligand carboxylate site for metal–ligand interaction. It was observed that the temperature-induced vibrational dynamics involves switching occupancy between antisymmetric and symmetric configurations of the carboxylate oxygen lone pair orbitals, through which electron density around carboxylate oxygen sites is redistributed and metal–ligand interactions are tuned. In turn, water adsorption involves an additional perturbation of π orbitals not observed in the structural change solely induced by temperature.

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