| Literature DB >> 25615669 |
Marc A Little1, Michael E Briggs1, James T A Jones1, Marc Schmidtmann1, Tom Hasell1, Samantha Y Chong1, Kim E Jelfs2, Linjiang Chen1, Andrew I Cooper1.
Abstract
Stable guest-free porous molecular crystals are uncommon. By contrast, organic molecular crystals with guest-occupied cavities are frequently observed, but these cavities tend to be unstable and collapse on removal of the guests-this feature has been referred to as 'virtual porosity'. Here, we show how we have trapped the virtual porosity in an unstable low-density organic molecular crystal by introducing a second molecule that matches the size and shape of the unstable voids. We call this strategy 'retro-engineering' because it parallels organic retrosynthetic analysis, and it allows the metastable two-dimensional hexagonal pore structure in an organic solvate to be trapped in a binary cocrystal. Unlike the crystal with virtual porosity, the cocrystal material remains single crystalline and porous after removal of guests by heating.Year: 2014 PMID: 25615669 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.2156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427