In situ micropillar compression of an anisotropic metal-organic framework single crystal
Abstract: Understanding of the complex mechanical behavior of metal-organic frameworks (MOF) beyond their elastic limit will allow the design of real-world applications in chemical engineering, optoelectronics, energy conversion apparatus, and sensing devices. Through in situ compression of micropillars, the uniaxial stress-strain curves of a copper paddlewheel MOF (HKUST-1) were determined along two unique crystallographic directions, namely the (100) and (111) facets. We show strongly anisotropic elastic response where the ratio of the Young's moduli are E(111) ~ 3.6 x E(100), followed by extensive plastic flows. Likewise, the yield strengths are considerably different, in which Y(111) ~ 2 x Y(100) because of the underlying framework anisotropy. We measure the fracture toughness using micropillar splitting. While in situ tests revealed differential cracking behavior, the resultant toughness values of the two facets are comparable, yielding Kc ~ 0.5 MPa m1/2. This work provides new insights of porous framework ductility at the micron scale and failure by bonds breakage.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.