Literature DB >> 34227389

The Importance of Highly Connected Building Units in Reticular Chemistry: Thoughtful Design of Metal-Organic Frameworks.

Vincent Guillerm1, Mohamed Eddaoudi1.   

Abstract

ConspectusThe prediction of crystal structures assembled in three dimensions has been considered for a long time, simultaneously as a chemical wasteland and a certain growth point of the chemistry of the future. Less than 30 years after Roald Hoffmann's statement, we can categorically affirm that the elevation of reticular chemistry and the introduction of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) significantly tackled this tridimensional assembly issue. MOFs result from the assembly of organic polytopic organic ligands bridging metal nodes, clusters, chains, or layers together into mostly three-periodic open frameworks. They can exhibit extremely high porosity and offer great potential as revolutionary catalysts, drug carrier systems, sensors, smart materials, and, of course, separation agents. Overall, the progressive development of reticular chemistry has been a game changer in materials chemistry during the last 25 years.Such diverse properties often result not only from the selected organic and inorganic molecular building blocks (MBBs) but also from their distribution within the framework. Indeed, the size and shape of the porous system, as well as the location of active sites influence the overall properties. Therefore, in the continuity of achieving the crystallization of three-periodic structures, chemists and crystal engineers faced the next challenge, as summarized by John Maddox: "it remains in general impossible to predict the structure of even the simplest crystallographic solids from knowledge of their chemical composition". This is where rational design takes place.In this Account, we detail three specific approaches developed by our group to facilitate the design and assembly of finely tuned MOFs. All are based on careful geometrical consideration and a deep study and understanding of the existing nets and topologies. We recognized that highly connected nets, if possible, edge-transitive, are ideal blueprints because their number is limited in contrast to nets with lower connectivity. Therefore, we embarked on taking advantage of existing highly connected MBBs, or, in parallel, promoting their formation to meet our requirements. This is achieved by utilizing externally decorated metal-organic polyhedra as supermolecular building blocks (SBBs), serving as a net-coding building unit, comprising the requisite connectivity and directional information coding for the chosen nets. The SBB approach allowed the synthesis of several families of SBB-based MOFs, including fcu, rht, and gea-MOFs, that are detailed here.The second strategy is directly inherited from the success of the SBB approach. In seeking highly connected building units, our group naturally expanded its research focus to nets that can be deconstructed into layers, pillared in various ways. In the supermolecular building layer (SBL) approach, the layers have an almost infinite connectivity, and the framework backbone is fixed in two dimensions while the third is free for pillar expansion and functionalization. The cases of trigonal pillaring leading to rtl, eea, and apo MOFs as well as the quadrangular pillaring leading to a family of tbo-MOFs are discussed here, along with recent cases of highly connected pillars in pek and aea-MOFs.Finally, our experience with highly coordinated MBBs led us to develop a novel way to use them as secondary building units of lower connectivity and unlock the possibility of assembling a novel class of zeolite-like MOFs (ZMOFs). The case of the Zr-sod-ZMOFs designed through a cantellation strategy is described as a future leading direction of MOF design.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34227389     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00214

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  5 in total

Review 1.  Obtaining Water from Air Using Porous Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs).

Authors:  Brij Mohan; Suresh Kumar; Quansheng Chen
Journal:  Top Curr Chem (Cham)       Date:  2022-10-21

2.  Repurposing ICG enables MR/PA imaging signal amplification and iron depletion for iron-overload disorders.

Authors:  Huirong Lin; Yu Zhou; Jiaming Wang; Huimeng Wang; Tianhong Yao; Hu Chen; Huili Zheng; Yang Zhang; En Ren; Lai Jiang; Chengchao Chu; Xiaoyuan Chen; Jingsong Mao; Fudi Wang; Gang Liu
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2021-12-17       Impact factor: 14.136

3.  Metal-Organic Frameworks as Unique Platforms to Gain Insight of σ-Hole Interactions for the Removal of Organic Dyes from Aquatic Ecosystems.

Authors:  Cristina Negro; Paula Escamilla; Rosaria Bruno; Jesus Ferrando-Soria; Donatella Armentano; Emilio Pardo
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2022-03-24       Impact factor: 5.020

4.  Linking metal-organic cages pairwise as a design approach for assembling multivariate crystalline materials.

Authors:  Adrian W Markwell-Heys; Michael Roemelt; Ashley D Slattery; Oliver M Linder-Patton; Witold M Bloch
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2021-11-30       Impact factor: 9.825

Review 5.  Metal-Organic Polyhedra as Building Blocks for Porous Extended Networks.

Authors:  Akim Khobotov-Bakishev; Laura Hernández-López; Cornelia von Baeckmann; Jorge Albalad; Arnau Carné-Sánchez; Daniel Maspoch
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2022-02-04       Impact factor: 16.806

  5 in total

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