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Multistage Condensation Pathway Minimizes Hysteresis in Water Harvesting with Large-Pore Metal–Organic Frameworks

Alberto Zaragoza, Matías H. Factorovich, Valeria Molinero

2024Chemistry of Materials11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) have emerged as promising materials for atmospheric water harvesting (AWH). Large-pore MOFs provide high water capacity, but their significant hysteresis between sorption and desorption makes them unsuitable for AWH. Co 2 Cl 2 (BTDD) is a noteworthy exception. This MOF has large, 2.2 nm diameter one-dimensional pores and combines both record-high water capacity and minimal hysteresis, making it an excellent material for water capture in arid areas. Sorption reversibility in Co 2 Cl 2 (BTDD) has been attributed to continuous water uptake. However, the sharp adsorption/desorption in the isotherms supports a discontinuous first-order transition. Here, we use molecular simulations to compute the water adsorption and desorption pathways and isotherms in a Co 2 Cl 2 (BTDD) model, to elucidate how this MOF achieves reversibility despite its large pore size. The simulations reveal a multistage mechanism of discontinuous water uptake facilitated by spatial segregation of rows of hydrophilic metal sites bridged by ∼1 nm hydrophobic ligands. The multistage mechanism breaks the barrier of capillary condensation into smaller, easier to surmount ones, resulting in a facile process despite the sharp density discontinuity between confined liquid and vapor. Our results explain why exchanging Co 2+ for Ni 2+ or Cl – for F – in the MOF has minimal impact on the condensation and desorption pressures. On the other hand, we predict that a decrease in hydrophilicity of the MOF vertices would strongly increase the hysteresis. We expect that the relationships between spatial distribution of hydrophilic sites and hysteresis unraveled in this study will assist the design of water harvesting materials with maximal capacity and reversibility.

Topics & Concepts

HysteresisDesorptionSorptionAdsorptionCondensationMaterials scienceCapillary condensationChemical engineeringChemical physicsWater vaporMetal-organic frameworkThermodynamicsChemistryPhysical chemistryOrganic chemistryEngineeringPhysicsQuantum mechanicsMetal-Organic Frameworks: Synthesis and ApplicationsEnhanced Oil Recovery TechniquesNanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies
Multistage Condensation Pathway Minimizes Hysteresis in Water Harvesting with Large-Pore Metal–Organic Frameworks | Litcius