Publication | Closed Access
Hydrogen‐Bonded Organic Frameworks (HOFs): A New Class of Porous Crystalline Proton‐Conducting Materials
87
Citations
38
References
2016
Year
EngineeringPorous MembraneChemistryChemical EngineeringProton-exchange MembraneMetal-organic PolyhedronHybrid MaterialsMaterials ScienceCovalent Bonded FrameworkHydrogenMetal-organic FrameworksElectrochemistryOrganic Material ChemistryPorous Organic FrameworksHydrogen BondNew ClassAbstract TwoFunctional MaterialsOrganic Frameworks
Abstract Two porous hydrogen‐bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) based on arene sulfonates and guanidinium ions are reported. As a result of the presence of ionic backbones appended with protonic source, the compounds exhibit ultra‐high proton conduction values ( σ ) 0.75× 10 −2 S cm −1 and 1.8×10 −2 S cm −1 under humidified conditions. Also, they have very low activation energy values and the highest proton conductivity at ambient conditions (low humidity and at moderate temperature) among porous crystalline materials, such as metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) and covalent organic frameworks (COFs). These values are not only comparable to the conventionally used proton exchange membranes, such as Nafion used in fuel cell technologies, but is also the highest value reported in organic‐based porous architectures. Notably, this report inaugurates the usage of crystalline hydrogen‐bonded porous organic frameworks as solid‐state proton conducting materials.
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