Abstract

Metal nanoclusters (NCs) with atomically precise structures have sparked interest in catalysis. Unfortunately, their high aggregation tendency and the spatial resistance of surface ligands pose significant challenges. Herein, Au25 NCs are encapsulated into isoreticular metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), namely UiO-66-X (X = H, NH2, OH, and NO2), followed by the removal of surface ligands on Au25 NCs. The resulting surface-clean Au25 NCs, protected by the MOF spatial confinement, exhibit much superior activity and stability with respect to pristine Au25 NCs in the oxidative esterification of furfural. Remarkably, experimental and theoretical results jointly demonstrate that diverse functional groups on UiO-66-X modulate the Au25 electronic state, giving rise to the discriminated substrate adsorption energy of Au25@UiO-66-X. As a result, the high electron density and suitable substrate adsorption ability dominate the activity trend: Au25@UiO-66-NH2 > Au25@UiO-66-OH > Au25@UiO-66 > Au25@UiO-66-NO2. This work develops a new strategy for the stabilization of surface-clean metal NCs in pore wall-engineered MOFs for enhanced catalysis.

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