Harnessing Electrostatic Interactions for Enhanced Conductivity in Metal-Organic Frameworks

Abstract
The poor electrical conductivity of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) has been a stumbling block for its applications in many important fields. Therefore, exploring a simple and effective strategy to regulate the conductivity of MOFs is highly desired. Herein, anionic guest molecules are incorporated inside the pores of a cationic MOF (PFC-8), which increases its conductivity by five orders of magnitude while maintaining the original porosity. In contrast, the same operation in an isoreticular neutral framework (PFC-9) does not bring such a significant change. Theoretical studies reveal that the guest molecules, stabilized inside pores through electrostatic interaction, play the role of electron donors as do in semiconductors, bringing in an analogous n-type semiconductor mechanism for electron conduction. Therefore, we demonstrate that harnessing electrostatic interaction provides a new way to regulate the conductivity of MOFs without necessarily altering the original porous structure. This strategy would greatly broaden MOFs application potential in electronic and optoelectronic technologies.
Funding Information
  • Fujian Association for Science and Technology (2020000179)
  • Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (2019302)
  • National Natural Science Foundation of China (22071246, 21871267, 61874122, 22075282, 22031009, 21921001)
  • National Key Research and Development Program of China (2018YFA0208600)