Chemistry & Biochemistry

Permanent URI for this communityhttps://scholarworks.montana.edu/handle/1/42

The Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry offers research-oriented programs culminating in the Doctor of Philosophy degree. The faculty in the department have expertise over a broad range of specialty areas including synthesis, structure, spectroscopy, and mechanism. In each of these fields, the strength of the department has been recognized at the international level.

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Divergent Electrically Conductive Pathways in Yttrium-Based 2- and 3-Dimensional Metal–Organic Frameworks
    (American Chemical Society, 2024-07) Welty, Connor; Gormley, Eoghan L.; Oppenheim, Julius J.; Dincă, Mircea; Hendon, Christopher H.; Stadie, Nicholas P.
    Despite most porous framework solids exhibiting insulating character, some are known to conduct electrical charge. The peak performing conductive metal–organic frameworks are composed of redox-active hexasubstituted triphenylene linkers, but the impact of redox activity on material conductivity remains enigmatic because of limited availability of direct structure–function relationships. Here, we report a hexagonal yttrium-based conductive porous scaffold, comprising hexahydroxytriphenylene connected by Y-chains (YHOTP). In comparison to its known porous cubic counterpart (Y6HOTP2), this material features a 1000-fold increase in peak conductivity in polycrystalline samples (∼10–1 S cm–1). Furthermore, through a comparison of their electronic structures, we rationalize the origin of this difference and highlight the role of charge carrier concentration in dictating bulk electrical conductivity. Together, this work provides a design principle for the development of next-generation conductive porous frameworks.
Copyright (c) 2002-2022, LYRASIS. All rights reserved.