Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.121, No.8, 1651-1657, 1999
From condensed lanthanide coordination solids to microporous frameworks having accessible metal sites
The combination of terbium nitrate and 1,4-benzenedicarboxylic acid (H2BDC) in the presence of triethylamine yields the compound Tb-2(BDC)(3).(H2O)(4), which has an extended nonporous structure constructed from copolymerized BDC and To(III) units. The multidentate functionality of BDC and the tendency of Tb to have a high coordination number has allowed water to act as a terminal ligand to Tb in the structure. Upon thermally liberating the water ligands, a microporous material, Tb-2(BDC)(3), is achieved, which has extended 1-D channels and the same framework structure as that of the as-synthesized solid as evidenced by XRPD. Water sorption isotherm data proves that Tb-2(BDC)(3) has permanent microporosity, and points to the presence of accessible metal sites within the pores, which also allows the sorption of ammonia to give Tb-2(BDC)(3).(NH3)(4) Luminescence Lifetime measurements confirm that resorbed water and sorbed ammonia are bound to Tb and that they give distinctly different decay constants.