Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions

Gas reactions are prevalent in the industry and in our everyday lives. However, these processes are typically slow and difficult to monitor owing to the low molecular concentration of gas. While gas reactions and detections can be achieved at high temperatures and pressures, these operations are uns...

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Main Authors: Lee, Hiang Kwee, Ling, Xing Yi
Other Authors: Asian Spectroscopy Conference 2020
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144257
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1442572020-10-29T20:11:46Z Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions Lee, Hiang Kwee Ling, Xing Yi Asian Spectroscopy Conference 2020 Institute of Advanced Studies Science::Chemistry Surface-enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS) Metal-organic Framework (MOF) Gas reactions are prevalent in the industry and in our everyday lives. However, these processes are typically slow and difficult to monitor owing to the low molecular concentration of gas. While gas reactions and detections can be achieved at high temperatures and pressures, these operations are unsustainable because they demand a huge amount of energy input. Here, we achieve efficient gas-based reactions and sensing at ambient conditions by concentrating gas molecules at the interface formed between a functional solid and a metal-organic framework (MOF). Our strategy utilizes the excellent gas sorptivity of MOF to continuously accumulate gas molecules onto functional solid surfaces with plasmonic and/or catalytic properties. Using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), we are able to directly observe the concentration of gas molecules into a quasi-condensed phase at the nanoscale solid@MOF interface, even at ambient operations.[1] We further leverage on this unique molecular phenomenon to activate a CO2 carboxylation of an arene that is otherwise inert at 1 atm and 298 K.[2] Our solid@MOF design thus offers enormous opportunities in relevant fields including chemistry, heterogeneous catalysis, greenhouse gases removal and gas-to-fuel conversions. Published version 2020-10-23T06:34:27Z 2020-10-23T06:34:27Z 2020 Conference Paper Lee, H. K., & Ling, X. Y. (2020). Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions. Proc. Of the 7th Asian Spectroscopy Conference (ASC 2020). doi:10.32655/ASC_8-10_Dec2020.29 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144257 10.32655/ASC_8-10_Dec2020.29 en © 2020 Nanyang Technological University. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Chemistry
Surface-enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS)
Metal-organic Framework (MOF)
spellingShingle Science::Chemistry
Surface-enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS)
Metal-organic Framework (MOF)
Lee, Hiang Kwee
Ling, Xing Yi
Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions
description Gas reactions are prevalent in the industry and in our everyday lives. However, these processes are typically slow and difficult to monitor owing to the low molecular concentration of gas. While gas reactions and detections can be achieved at high temperatures and pressures, these operations are unsustainable because they demand a huge amount of energy input. Here, we achieve efficient gas-based reactions and sensing at ambient conditions by concentrating gas molecules at the interface formed between a functional solid and a metal-organic framework (MOF). Our strategy utilizes the excellent gas sorptivity of MOF to continuously accumulate gas molecules onto functional solid surfaces with plasmonic and/or catalytic properties. Using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), we are able to directly observe the concentration of gas molecules into a quasi-condensed phase at the nanoscale solid@MOF interface, even at ambient operations.[1] We further leverage on this unique molecular phenomenon to activate a CO2 carboxylation of an arene that is otherwise inert at 1 atm and 298 K.[2] Our solid@MOF design thus offers enormous opportunities in relevant fields including chemistry, heterogeneous catalysis, greenhouse gases removal and gas-to-fuel conversions.
author2 Asian Spectroscopy Conference 2020
author_facet Asian Spectroscopy Conference 2020
Lee, Hiang Kwee
Ling, Xing Yi
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Lee, Hiang Kwee
Ling, Xing Yi
author_sort Lee, Hiang Kwee
title Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions
title_short Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions
title_full Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions
title_fullStr Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions
title_full_unstemmed Applying nanoparticle@MOF interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions
title_sort applying nanoparticle@mof interface to activate and monitor chemical reactions at ambient conditions
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144257
_version_ 1683493931087560704