Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are compounds consisting of metal ions and organic molecules to form various low-dimensional nanostructures. Since their discovery only a decade ago, MOFs have enjoyed extensive exploration in synthesis and applications in gas storage/separation/purification, chromatography and catalysis. MOFs exhibiting extremely high surface areas are highly advantageous as they outperform other nanoporous materials such as zeolite, porous silica, activated carbon and carbon nanotubes with regard to structural variety and chemical functionality.
One of the challenges towards their applications is to make MOFs optimally conductive to be used as conductive porous elements in electronics. It was reported last year that naturally non-conductive MOFs turn metallic by doping with donor molecules. Now, comprehensive understanding of the conduction mechanism is urgently needed for implementations of MOFs into electronic devices.
The project aims at understanding mechanisms for electrical conduction in doped MOFs and utilizing metallic and semiconducting MOFs as electronic components in prototypical sensing, solar cell, optoelectronic and spintronic devices that haven’t been realized so far.
This will gain insight into how charge transfer and orbital hybridization between the MOF host and molecular guest lead to enhancements in electrical conduction of molecule- doped MOFs, and further to the emergence of advanced electronic, magnetic and magneto-transport properties due to quantum confinement of charge carriers.
Our unique approach combines chemical doping with donor molecules or ions, and field effect doping in MOF-based devices in order to control doping levels. The key to the electrical conduction is electronic interaction at the molecular interfaces that will be exclusively accessed by mean of element-specific and resonance-enhanced spectroscopy techniques combined with cutting-edge characterization techniques including atomic-resolution electron microscopy, electrical transport and magnetization measurements.
The principal investigator (PI) will conduct the project with experimental facilities and resources provided by the Atominstitut at TU Wien, national and international research partner institutions. PI is a leading academic in the field of nanoscience with his research focused on electronic, magnetic and optical properties on nanostructures such as carbon nanotubes, metal clusters and MOFs. His experience in leading an international project, knowledge in solid-state physics and skills in high-end spectroscopy and microscopy techniques, being complemented by the national and international collaborators’ expertise, will be elemental for the project which is highly demanding in terms of problem solving strategies in a cooperative manner on a state of the art level.