Abstract

Surface anchored metal-organic frameworks, SURMOFs, are highly porous materials, which can be grown on modified substrates as highly oriented, crystalline coatings by a quasi-epitaxial layer-by-layer method (liquid-phase epitaxy, or LPE). The chemical termination of the supporting substrate is crucial, because the most convenient method for substrate modification is the formation of a suitable self-assembled monolayer. The choice of a particular SAM also allows for control over the orientation of the SURMOF. Here, we demonstrate for the first time the site-selective growth of the SURMOF HKUST-1 on thiol-based self-assembled monolayers patterned by the nanografting technique, with an atomic force microscope as a structuring tool. Two different approaches were applied: The first one is based on 3-mercaptopropionic acid molecules which are grafted in a 1-decanethiolate SAM, which serves as a matrix for this nanolithography. The second approach uses 16-mercaptohexadecanoic acid, which is grafted in a matrix of an 1-octadecanethiolate SAM. In both cases a site-selective growth of the SURMOF is observed. In the latter case the roughness of the HKUST-1 is found to be significantly higher than for the 1-mercaptopropionic acid. The successful grafting process was verified by time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry and atomic force microscopy. The SURMOF structures grown via LPE were investigated and characterized by atomic force microscopy and Fourier-transform infrared microscopy.

Highlights

  • Metal organic frameworks (MOFs) are highly crystalline threedimensional micro- and mesoporous materials that consist of metal ions or metal-oxo units interconnected by organic linkers

  • In the present proof-of-concept study it has been demonstrated that the selective growth of micro- and sub-microsized MOFstructures can be achieved by combining layer-by-layer growth with atomic force microscopy (AFM)-based nanografting

  • As the amount of available surface anchored metal–organic frameworks (SURMOFs) structures is limited by the applied nanografting method and the structure dimensions are in the micrometerrange, the oriented growth of this structures has not yet been proven

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Summary

Introduction

Metal organic frameworks (MOFs) are highly crystalline threedimensional micro- and mesoporous materials that consist of metal ions or metal-oxo units (serving as nodes) interconnected by organic linkers. We demonstrate for the first time the site-selective growth of the SURMOF HKUST-1 on thiol-based self-assembled monolayers patterned by the nanografting technique, with an atomic force microscope as a structuring tool.

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