The photoactivity of three porphyrin-based metal–organic frameworks (PMOFs) incorporating Al, Ga, and In nodes was systematically evaluated using the photooxidation of an organic sulfide (2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide, or CEES; a mustard gas simulant). Faster photodegradation of CEES was observed for PMOFs with heavier metal nodes, placing In-PMOF as the most efficient photocatalyst in the series. Guided by this insight, we developed CSLA-10, a MOF integrating In nodes and Sn-doped porphyrin linker to synergistically amplify heavy-atom effects at both the nodes and ligand levels. CSLA-10 exhibited the fastest reported CEES photooxidation to date, achieving a half-life of 38 s in methanol under blue LED irradiation. When grafted onto textiles, CSLA-10 enabled solvent-free CEES degradation in air/O2 with a half-life of 2.7 min and complete conversion within 7 min, representing the most rapid full degradation reported under solvent-free conditions. This work establishes a dual heavy-atom strategy for enhancing intersystem crossing and singlet oxygen generation in porphyrin MOFs, providing a rational design principle for next-generation photocatalysts for the degradation of toxic organic sulfides.
Tang et al. (Wed,) studied this question.