Hetero-interpenetrated metal-organic frameworks.

Nat Chem

MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology, School of Natural Sciences, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand.

Published: October 2023

Interpenetrated metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) comprise two or more lattices that are mutually entangled. Interpenetration can be used to tune the structures and pore architectures of MOFs to influence, for example, their stability or interactions with guest molecules. The interpenetrating sublattices are typically identical, but hetero-interpenetrated MOFs, which consist of sublattices that are different from one another, have also been serendipitously produced. Here we describe a strategy for the deliberate synthesis of hetero-interpenetrated MOFs. We use the cubic α-MUF-9 framework as a host sublattice to template the growth of a second sublattice within its pores. Three different secondary sublattices are grown-two of which are not known as standalone MOFs-leading to three different hetero-interpenetrated MOFs. This strategy may serve to combine different properties into one material. We produce an asymmetric catalysis by allocating separate roles to the interpenetrating sublattices in a hetero-interpenetrated MOF: an achiral secondary amine on one sublattice provides the catalytic activity, while the chiral α-MUF-10 host imparts asymmetry to aldol and Henry reactions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41557-023-01277-zDOI Listing

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Hetero-interpenetrated metal-organic frameworks.

Nat Chem

October 2023

MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology, School of Natural Sciences, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand.

Interpenetrated metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) comprise two or more lattices that are mutually entangled. Interpenetration can be used to tune the structures and pore architectures of MOFs to influence, for example, their stability or interactions with guest molecules. The interpenetrating sublattices are typically identical, but hetero-interpenetrated MOFs, which consist of sublattices that are different from one another, have also been serendipitously produced.

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