Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Driving CO<sub>2</sub> to a Quasi-Condensed Phase at the Interface between a Nanoparticle Surface and a Metal–Organic Framework at 1 bar and 298 K

65

Citations

32

References

2017

Year

Abstract

We demonstrate a molecular-level observation of driving CO<sub>2</sub> molecules into a quasi-condensed phase on the solid surface of metal nanoparticles (NP) under ambient conditions of 1 bar and 298 K. This is achieved via a CO<sub>2</sub> accumulation in the interface between a metal-organic framework (MOF) and a metal NP surface formed by coating NPs with a MOF. Using real-time surface-enhanced Raman scattering spectroscopy, a >18-fold enhancement of surface coverage of CO<sub>2</sub> is observed at the interface. The high surface concentration leads CO<sub>2</sub> molecules to be in close proximity with the probe molecules on the metal surface (4-methylbenzenethiol), and transforms CO<sub>2</sub> molecules into a bent conformation without the formation of chemical bonds. Such linear-to-bent transition of CO<sub>2</sub> is unprecedented at ambient conditions in the absence of chemical bond formation, and is commonly observed only in pressurized systems (>10<sup>5</sup> bar). The molecular-level observation of a quasi-condensed phase induced by MOF coating could impact the future design of hybrid materials in diverse applications, including catalytic CO<sub>2</sub> conversion and ambient solid-gas operation.

References

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