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Metal–organic frameworks for electronics and photonics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2016

Mircea Dincă
Affiliation:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA; mdinca@mit.edu
François Léonard
Affiliation:
Sandia National Laboratories, USA; fleonar@sandia.gov

Abstract

Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), with their crystalline nanoporous three-dimensional structures, have emerged as unique multifunctional materials that combine high porosity with catalytic, photophysical, or other properties to reveal new fundamental science and applications. Because MOFs are composed of organic molecules linking metal centers in ways that are not usually conducive to the formation of free-charge carriers or low-energy charge-transport pathways, they are typically insulators. Accordingly, applications so far have harnessed the unique structural properties and porosity of MOFs, which depend only to a small extent on the ability to manipulate their electronic structure. An exciting new area has emerged due to the recent demonstration of MOFs with controlled electronic and optical properties, which is enabling new fundamental science and opens up the possibility of applications in electronics and photonics. This article presents an overview of the fundamental science issues related to controlling electronic and optical properties of MOFs, and how research groups worldwide have been exploring such properties for electronics, thermoelectrics, photophysics, and charge storage.

Information

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2016 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are created by assembling metal (M) ions or clusters with multi-functionality organic ligands through functional groups such as carboxylates and azoles. The self-assembly process can lead to 1D, 2D, or 3D connected structures, whose properties are defined primarily by pore size, pore shape, and chemical composition. Each component (i.e., metal node, functional group, organic ligand) is critical for the electronic structure. The fundamental and applied properties of MOFs, in particular, related to electronics and photonics applications, are illustrated at the bottom.

Figure 1

Figure 2. The advent of electronic and photonic metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) leads to new possibilities for applications in electronics, thermoelectrics, energy storage such as battery electrodes, chemical sensing, photovoltaics and photophysics, and light emission. This requires the development of new intrinsically conducting MOFs as well as approaches for infiltration of molecules in the MOF pores to achieve new emergent properties. Because of the large number of MOFs and potential molecules for infiltration, modeling will play a key role in identifying promising systems and understanding their properties. Note: LUMO, lowest unoccupied molecular orbital; HOMO, highest occupied molecular orbital; Eg, bandgap energy; CBM, conduction-band minimum; VBM, valence-band maximum.