| Literature DB >> 29656637 |
Mohamed I Hashim1, Ha T M Le1, Teng-Hao Chen1, Yu-Sheng Chen2, Olafs Daugulis1, Chia-Wei Hsu1, Allan J Jacobson1,3, Watchareeya Kaveevivitchai1, Xiao Liang1, Tatyana Makarenko1, Ognjen Š Miljanić1, Ilja Popovs1, Hung Vu Tran1, Xiqu Wang1, Chia-Hua Wu1, Judy I Wu1.
Abstract
Porous molecular crystals are an emerging class of porous materials that is unique in being built from discrete molecules rather than being polymeric in nature. In this study, we examined the effects of molecular structure of the precursors on the formation of porous solid-state structures with a series of 16 rigid aromatics. The majority of these precursors possess pyrazole groups capable of hydrogen bonding, as well as electron-rich aromatics and electron-poor tetrafluorobenzene rings. These precursors were prepared using a combination of Pd- and Cu-catalyzed cross-couplings, careful manipulations of protecting groups on the nitrogen atoms, and solvothermal syntheses. Our study varied the geometry and dimensions of precursors, as well as the presence of groups capable of hydrogen bonding and [π···π] stacking. Thirteen derivatives were crystallographically characterized, and four of them were found to be porous with surface areas between 283 and 1821 m2 g-1. Common to these four porous structures were (a) rigid trigonal geometry, (b) [π···π] stacking of electron-poor tetrafluorobenzenes with electron-rich pyrazoles or tetrazoles, and (c) hydrogen bonding between the terminal heteroaromatic rings.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29656637 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b02869
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419