Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.130, No.26, 8386-8396, 2008
Role of exposed metal sites in hydrogen storage in MOFs
The role of exposed metal sites in increasing the H-2 storage performances in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) has been investigated by means of IR spectrometry. Three MOFs have been considered: MOF-5, with unexposed metal sites, and HKUST-1 and CPO-27-Ni, with exposed Cu2+ and Ni2+, respectively. The onset temperature of spectroscopic features associated with adsorbed H-2 correlates with the adsorption enthalpy obtained by the VTIR method and with the shift experienced by the H-H stretching frequency. This relationship can be ascribed to the different nature and accessibility of the metal sites. On the basis of a pure energetic evaluation, it was observed that the best performance was shown by CPO-27-Ni that exhibits also an initial adsorption enthalpy of -13.5 kJ mol(-1), the highest yet observed for a MOF Unfortunately, upon comparison of the hydrogen amounts stored at high pressure, the hydrogen capacities in these conditions are mostly dependent on the surface area and total pore volume of the material. This means that if control of MOF surface area can benefit the total stored amounts, only the presence of a great number of strong adsorption sites can make the (P,T) storage conditions more economically favorable. These observations lead to the prediction that efficient H-2 storage by physisorption can be obtained by increasing the surface density of strong adsorption sites.