Amphidynamic crystals are an emergent class of condensed phase matter designed with a combination of lattice-forming elements linked to components that display engineered dynamics in the solid state. Here, we address the design of a crystalline array of molecular
rotors with inertial diffusional rotation at the nanoscale, characterized by the absence of steric or electronic barriers. We solved this
challenge with 1,4-bicyclo[2.2.2]octane dicarboxylic acid (BODCA)-MOF, a metal-organic framework (MOF) built with a high-symmetry bicyclo[2.2.2]octane dicarboxylate linker in a Zn4O cubic lattice. Using spin-lattice relaxation 1H solid-state NMR at 29.49 and 13.87 MHz in the temperature range of 2.3–80 K, we showed that internal rotation occurs in a potential with energy barriers of 0.185 kcal mol-1. These results were confirmed with 2H solid-state NMR line-shape analysis and spin-lattice relaxation at 76.78 MHz obtained between 6 and 298 K, which, combined with molecular dynamics simulations, indicate
that inertial diffusional rotation is characterized by a broad range of angular displacements with no residence time at any given site. The ambient temperature rotation of the bicyclo[2.2.2]octane (BCO) group in BODCA-MOF constitutes an example where engineered rotational dynamics in the solid state are as fast as they would be in a high-density gas or in a low-density liquid phase.
Revised: February 21, 2020 |
Published: December 26, 2017
Citation
Vogelsberg C.S., F.J. Uribe-Romo, A.S. Lipton, S. Yang, K.N. Houk, S.E. Brown, and M.A. Garcia-Garibay. 2017.Ultrafast rotation in an amphidynamic crystalline metal organic framework.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) 114, no. 52:13613-13618.PNNL-SA-125469.doi:10.1073/pnas.1708817115