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Water clusters in hydrophobic crystalline porous covalent organic frameworks

Increase font size  Decrease font size Date:2022-01-21   Views:584

National University of Singapore chemists have developed hydrophobic porous nanochannels of covalent organic frameworks which can be used to confine and transport water clusters.

Water is essential for daily life and its behavior can vary in different host materials. For example,watercaptured in hydrophilic hydrogels can lead to tight locking ofwater moleculeswithin the material. Hydrophobic materials on the other hand, impose a preconception of having a weak affinity to water molecules as they repel them. This idea precludes the extensive study of water confinement inhydrophobic materials.

A research team led by Professor Jiang Donglin from the Department of Chemistry, National University of Singapore has realized water confinement in hydrophobic microporous materials. They successfully confined water molecules using their specially developed materials, known as hydrophobic crystalline microporous covalent organic frameworks (COFs), by entwining "pseudo-hydrophilicity" strips within a hydrophobic environment. The team further determined the pore size limit for the different topologies (trigonal, tetragonal, and hexagonal channels) in realizing water cluster-based adsorption. These findings are important for the future design of water heat-pumps, water transport and separation, as well as realizing single-file flow through materials for rapidwater transport.

The researchers developed three different material designs, trigonal, tetragonal, and hexagonal microporous covalent organic frameworks with high porosity (see Figure 1). The framework itself is hydrophobic and connected by polar carbon-nitrogen (C=N) imine linkages. These polar sites align vertically to form "pseudo-hydrophilicity" strips within the hydrophobic walls forming channels. Water molecules preferentially interact with the "pseudo-hydrophilic" strips for nucleation. These water molecules then grow intosmall clustersthat fit and then are adsorbed into the channels. As a result, these microporous COFs are able to contain water molecules easily. More than 90 percent of the free space within achannelcan be occupied by water molecules. Interestingly, in these channels, the water does not behave like bulk water. Instead, the extensive hydrogen bonding network present in bulk water is broken down and reconstructed into small clusters when confined in these channels. This could alter water's intrinsic properties.

The researchers also found that among the three different designs, the behavior of these water clusters is more sensitive to the trigonal pore design. The adsorption of water vapor can be easily switched off by the addition of a methyl group (CH3) to the trigonal pore walls (see Figure 2). Applying a surface engineering technique to the pores, the amount of water molecules adsorbed can be halved from 93 percent to 49 percent. These significant alterations in water adsorption behavior show that molecular design in COFs is important for controlling water access in the material. Such fine control is rare and difficult to realize in other materials.

With the knowledge gained from this work, the team is planning to further explore the interactions between COFs and watermolecules.

Professor Jiang Donglin said, "Our research findings show that small hydrophobic pores can become a central player in the development of game-changing technologies for water uptake, transport and separation and heat-pump energy conversion."

 
 
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