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

12 November 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Using metal-organic cages (MOCs) as preformed supermolecular building-blocks (SBBs) is a powerful strategy to design functional metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with control over the pore architecture and connectivity. However, introducing chemical complexity into the network via this route is limited as most methodologies focus on only one type of MOC as the building-block. Herein we present the pairwise linking of MOCs as a design approach to introduce defined chemical complexity into porous materials. Our methodology exploits preferential Rh-aniline coordination and stoichiometric control to rationally link Cu4L4 and Rh4L4 MOCs into chemically complex, yet extremely well-defined crystalline solids. This strategy is expected to open up significant new possibilities to design bespoke multi-functional materials with atomistic control over the location and ordering of chemical functionalities.

Keywords

Metal-organic cage
Metal-organic framework
multivariate
linking
porous

Supplementary materials

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Supporting information (synthesis, characterization, analysis and X-ray crystallography)
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