Tandem Assembly and Etching Chemistry towards Mesoporous Conductive Metal–Organic Frameworks for Sodium Storage Over 50,000 Cycles
Jiahao Chen, Gaoyang Li, Fanxing Bu, Jiazhuang Tian, Lin Liu, Yifeng Wang, Jie Zhang, Xingjin Li, Xiang Li, Zhuo Yang, Dongliang Chao, Dongliang Chao, Dongliang Chao, Dongyuan Zhao
Abstract
Abstract Despite two‐dimensional (2D) conductive metal–organic frameworks (cMOFs) being attractive due to their intrinsic electrical conductivity and redox activity for energy applications, alleviating the constrained mass transfer within long‐range micropore channels remains a significant challenge. Herein, we present a tandem assembly and etching chemistry, to incorporate perpendicularly aligned mesopores into the micropores of cMOFs, via a bi‐functional modulator. Synchrotron spectral and morphological analyses demonstrate that the elaborate ammonia modulator first coordinates with Zn 2+ forming defects during the initial self‐assembly of cMOF oligomers, which then initiates mesoporous cMOFs via in situ etching. In situ spectroscopy and theoretical simulations further reveal that such a unique perpendicular mesoporous structure shorts the micropore channels by two orders of magnitude and relaxes the inherent ion stacking within micropores, leading to five times faster Na + transport and a remarkable rate capability at 250 C and sodium storage lifespan over 50,000 cycles. Our protocol opens up a new avenue for introducing mesopores into microporous cMOFs for advanced energy applications and beyond.