Litcius/Paper detail

Creating enzyme-mimicking nanopockets in metal-organic frameworks for catalysis

Xiaofei Zhang, Caoyu Yang, Pengfei An, Chengqian Cui, Yumiao Ma, Haitao Liu, Hui Wang, Xiaoying Yan, Guodong Li, Zhiyong Tang

2022Science Advances71 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Numerous efforts are being made toward constructing artificial nanopockets inside heterogeneous catalysts to implement challenging reactions that are difficult to occur on traditional heterogeneous catalysts. Here, the enzyme-mimetic nanopockets are fabricated inside the typical UiO-66 by coordinating zirconium nodes with terephthalate (BDC) ligands and monocarboxylate modulators including formic acid (FC), acetic acid (AC), or trifluoroacetic acid (TFA). When used in transfer hydrogenation of alkyl levulinates with isopropanol toward γ-valerolactone (GVL), these modulators endow zirconium sites with enhanced activity and selectivity and good stability. The catalytic activity of UiO-66FC is ~30 times that of UiO-66, also outperforming the state-of-the-art heterogeneous catalysts. Distinct from general consensus on electron-withdrawing or electron-donating effect on the altered activity of metal centers, this improvement mainly originates from the conformational change of modulators in the nanopocket to assist forming the rate-determining six-membered ring intermediate at zirconium sites, which are stabilized by van der Waals force interactions.

Topics & Concepts

Trifluoroacetic acidZirconiumCatalysisMetal-organic frameworkFormic acidSelectivityAcetic acidAlkylCombinatorial chemistryElectron transferMaterials sciencevan der Waals forceChemistryOrganic chemistryMoleculeAdsorptionMetal-Organic Frameworks: Synthesis and ApplicationsPolyoxometalates: Synthesis and ApplicationsCatalysis for Biomass Conversion
Creating enzyme-mimicking nanopockets in metal-organic frameworks for catalysis | Litcius