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1.
Acc Chem Res ; 2024 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39370855

ABSTRACT

ConspectusUtilizing light to enable chemical conversions presents a green and sustainable approach to produce fuels and chemicals, and photocatalysis is one of the key chemical technologies that needs to be well developed in this century. Despite continuous progress in the advancement of various photocatalysts based on small inorganic and organic compounds, polymers, and networks, designing and constructing photocatalysts that combine activity, selectivity, and reusability remains a challenging goal. For catalytic activity, the difficulty originates from the complexity of photochemical reactions, where the light-harvesting system, multielectron and multihole-involving processes, and pinpoint mass delivery simultaneously need to be established in the system. For selectivity, the difficulty stems from the elaborate design of catalytic sites and space, especially their orbital energy levels, spatial arrangement, and environment; developing a molecular strategy that enables an overall design and control of these factors of different aspects is necessary yet arduous. For reusability, the difficulty arises from the stability and recyclability of the photocatalysts upon continuous operation under photoredox reaction conditions. How to recover photocatalysts in an energy-saving way to enable their cyclic use while retaining activity and selectivity is at the core of this problem. These bottleneck issues reflect that molecular design of a photocatalyst is not a simple summation of the above requirements, but a systematic scheme that can organically interlock various aspects is needed.To enable such an elaborate design and precise control, a basic requirement of the scaffold for constructing a promising photocatalyst is that its primary and high-order structures should be molecularly predesignable and synthetically controllable. Such a molecular regime has successfully evolved in natural photosynthesis, where light-harvesting chlorophyll antennae and photocatalytic centers are spatially well-organized and energetically well-defined to build ways for exciton migration, photoinduced electron transfer and charge separation, electron and hole flows, and oxidation of water and reduction of carbon dioxide, thereby converting water into oxygen to release ATP and NADPH via the light reaction and carbon dioxide into glucose with ATP and NADPH through the dark reaction. Similarly, a predesignable polymeric scaffold would be promising for integrating these complex photochemical processes to construct photocatalysts.Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are a class of extended yet polymeric materials that enable the organization of organic units or metallo-organic moieties into well-defined architectures. In principle, COFs are molecularly designable with topology diagrams and synthetically controllable through polymerization reactions, offering an irreplaceable platform for designing and synthesizing photocatalysts. This feature enticed researchers to develop various photocatalysts based on COFs and drove the rapid progress in this field over the past decade. In this Account, we summarize the recent advances in the molecular design and synthetic control of COF photocatalysts, by highlighting the key achievements in developing ways to enable light harvesting, trigger photoinduced electron transfer and charge separation, allow charge carrier transport and mass delivery, control energy level, catalytic space, and environmental engineering, and develop stability and recyclability with an aim to reveal a full picture of this field. By scrutinizing typical photocatalytic reactions, we show the key problems to be addressed for COFs and predict future directions.

2.
Carcinogenesis ; 45(6): 399-408, 2024 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38306794

ABSTRACT

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) exhibits a high mortality rate due to its high invasion and metastatic nature, and the acidic microenvironment plays a pivotal role. Acid-sensing ion channel 1 (ASIC1) is upregulated in HCC tissues and facilitates tumor progression in a pH-dependent manner, while the specific mechanisms therein remain currently unclear. Herein, we aimed to investigate the underlying mechanisms by which ASIC1 contributes to the development of HCC. Using bioinformatics analysis, we found a significant association between ASIC1 expression and malignant transformation of HCC, such as poor prognosis, metastasis and recurrence. Specifically, ASIC1 enhanced the migration and invasion capabilities of Li-7 cells in the in vivo experiment using an HCC lung metastasis mouse model, as well as in the in vitro experiments such as wound healing assay and Transwell assay. Furthermore, our comprehensive gene chip and molecular biology experiments revealed that ASIC1 promoted HCC migration and invasion by activating the PRKACA/AP-1 signaling pathway. Our findings indicate that targeting ASIC1 could have therapeutic potential for inhibiting HCC progression.


Subject(s)
Acid Sensing Ion Channels , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular , Cell Movement , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Liver Neoplasms , Neoplasm Invasiveness , Signal Transduction , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/pathology , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/genetics , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/metabolism , Acid Sensing Ion Channels/genetics , Acid Sensing Ion Channels/metabolism , Liver Neoplasms/pathology , Liver Neoplasms/genetics , Liver Neoplasms/metabolism , Animals , Humans , Mice , Transcription Factor AP-1/metabolism , Transcription Factor AP-1/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinase Catalytic Subunits/genetics , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinase Catalytic Subunits/metabolism , Male , Prognosis , Cell Proliferation
3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(26): 18151-18160, 2024 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38907725

ABSTRACT

Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) offer an irreplaceable platform for mass transport, as they provide aligned one-dimensional channels as pathways. Especially, proton conduction is of great scientific interest and technological importance. However, unlike proton conduction under humidity, anhydrous proton conduction remains a challenge, as it requires robust materials and proceeds under harsh conditions. Here, we report exceptional anhydrous proton conduction in stable crystalline porous COFs by integrating neat phosphoric acid into the channels to form extended hydrogen-bonding networks. The phosphoric acid networks in the pores are stabilized by hierarchical multipoint and multichain hydrogen-bonding interactions with the 3D channel walls. We synthesized five hexagonal COFs that possess different pore sizes, which are gradually tuned from micropores to mesopores. Remarkably, mesoporous COFs with a high pore volume exhibit an exceptional anhydrous proton conductivity of 0.31 S cm-1, which marks the highest conductivity among all examples reported for COFs. We observed that the proton conductivity is dependent on the pore volume, pore size, and content of phosphoric acid. Increasing the pore volume improves the proton conductivity in an exponential fashion. Remarkably, changing the pore volume from 0.41 to 1.60 cm3 g-1 increases the proton conductivity by 1150-fold. Interestingly, as the pore size increases, the activation energy barrier of proton conduction decreases in linear mode. The mesopores enable fast proton hopping across the channels, while the micropores follow sluggish vehicle conduction. Experiments on tuning phosphoric acid loading contents revealed that a well-developed hydrogen-bonding phosphoric acid network in the pores is critical for proton conduction.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(15): 10953-10962, 2024 Apr 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38565222

ABSTRACT

We report light gating in synthetic one-dimensional nanochannels of stable crystalline porous covalent organic frameworks. The frameworks consist of 2D hexagonal skeletons that are extended over the x-y plane and stacked along the z-direction to create dense yet aligned 1D mesoporous channels. The pores are designed to be photoadaptable by covalently integrating tetrafluoro-substituted azobenzene units onto edges, which protrude from walls and offer light-gating machinery confined in the channels. The implanted tetrafluoroazobenzene units are thermally stable yet highly sensitive to visible light to induce photoisomerization between the E and Z forms. Remarkably, photoisomerization induces drastic changes in intrapore polarity as well as pore shape and size, which exert profound effects on the molecular adsorption of a broad spectrum of compounds, ranging from inorganic iodine to organic dyes, drugs, and enzymes. Unexpectedly, the systems respond rapidly to visible lights to gate the molecular release of drugs and enzymes. Photoadaptable covalent organic frameworks with reversibly convertible pores offer a platform for constructing light-gating porous materials and tailorable delivery systems, remotely controlled by visible lights.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(36): 25118-25124, 2024 Sep 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39213509

ABSTRACT

Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are a class of crystalline porous materials with well-defined π arrays and ordered channels, which can be predesigned with a topology diagram and prepared via a polycondensation reaction. Over the past decade, various types of π building units with different functional groups have been developed. Among them, aldehyde is one of the most widely used monomers that form COFs with azine, hydrazine, imine, squaranine, and C═C linkages. In contrast, its closest analogue, i.e., ketone, despite its broad structural diversity, has not yet been investigated for the design and synthesis of COFs. Herein we report the first examples of ketazine-linked COFs by developing ketones as monomers to enable polycondensation with hydrazine under solvothermal conditions. We observed that a careful screening of reaction conditions including solvent, catalyst, concentration, reaction temperature, and reaction time leads to the finding of optimal polymerization systems to produce highly crystalline and porous ketazine-linked COFs. Surprisingly, the ketazine linkage enables π conjugation between knot and linker sites and renders the resultant materials able to emit a strong blue fluorescence, highlighting the π electronic features of this new family of COFs. Our findings of ketones as monomers and ketazine as linkage bring unprecedented structures, functions, and applications to the field of COFs.

6.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(33): e202408296, 2024 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38843109

ABSTRACT

Proton conduction is important in both fundamental research and technological development. Here we report designed synthesis of crystalline porous covalent organic frameworks as a new platform for high-rate anhydrous proton conduction. By developing nanochannels with different topologies as proton pathways and loading neat phosphoric acid to construct robust proton carrier networks in the pores, we found that pore topology is crucial for proton conduction. Its effect on increasing proton conductivity is in an exponential mode other than linear fashion, endowing the materials with exceptional proton conductivities exceeding 10-2 S cm-1 over a broad range of temperature and a low activation energy barrier down to 0.24 eV. Remarkably, the pore size controls conduction mechanism, where mesopores promote proton conduction via a fast-hopping mechanism, while micropores follow a sluggish vehicle process. Notably, decreasing phosphoric acid loading content drastically reduces proton conductivity and greatly increases activation energy barrier, emphasizing the pivotal role of well-developed proton carrier network in proton transport. These findings and insights unveil a new general and transformative guidance for designing porous framework materials and systems for high-rate ion conduction, energy storage, and energy conversion.

7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(3): e202316092, 2024 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38029378

ABSTRACT

Helicenes are a class of fascinating chiral helical molecules with rich chemistry developed continuously over the past 100 years. Their helical, conjugated, and twisted structures make them attractive for constructing molecular systems. However, studies over the past century are mainly focused on synthesizing helicenes with increased numbers of aromatic rings and complex heterostructures, while research on inorganic, organic, and polymeric helicene materials is still embryonic. Herein, we report the first examples of helicene covalent organic frameworks, i.e., [7]Helicene sp2 c-COF-1, by condensing [7]Helicene dialdehyde with trimethyl triazine via the C=C bond formation reaction under solvothermal conditions. The resultant [7]Helicene sp2 c-COF-1 exhibits prominent X-ray diffraction peaks and assumes a highly ordered 2D lattice structure originated from the twisted configuration of [7]Helicene unit. The C=C linked [7]Helicene sp2 c-COF-1 materials exhibited extended π conjugation and broadly tuned their absorption, emission, redox activity, photoconductivity, and light-emitting activity, demonstrating rich multifunctionalities and great potentials in developing various applications. This work opens a way to a new family of COFs as well as helicene materials, enabling the exploration of unprecedented π architectures and properties.

8.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(22): e202403472, 2024 May 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38502777

ABSTRACT

Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) provide a molecular platform for designing a novel class of functional materials with well-defined structures. A crucial structural parameter is the linkage, which dictates how knot and linker units are connected to form two-dimensional polymers and layer frameworks, shaping ordered π-array and porous architectures. However, the roles of linkage in the development of ordered π electronic structures and functions remain fundamental yet unresolved issues. Here we report the designed synthesis of COFs featuring four representative linkages: hydrazone, imine, azine, and C=C bonds, to elucidate their impacts on the evolution of π electronic structures and functions. Our observations revealed that the hydrazone linkage provides a non-conjugated connection, while imine and azine allow partial π conjugation, and the C=C bond permits full π-conjugation. Importantly, the linkage profoundly influences the control of π electronic structures and functions, unraveling its pivotal role in determining key electronic properties such as band gap, frontier energy levels, light absorption, luminescence, carrier density and mobility, and magnetic permeability. These findings highlight the significance of linkage chemistry in COFs and offer a general and transformative guidance for designing framework materials to achieve electronic functions.

9.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202411558, 2024 Jul 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39024117

ABSTRACT

Helicenes represent a class of fascinating π compounds with fused yet folded backbones. Despite their broad structural diversity, harnessing helicenes to develop well-defined materials is still a formidable challenge. Here we report the synthesis of crystalline porous helicene materials by exploring helicenes to synthesize covalent 2D lattices and layered π frameworks. Topology-directed polymerization of [6]helicenes and porphyrin creates 2D covalent networks with alternate helicene-porphyrin alignment along the x and y directions at a 1.5-nm interval and develops [6]helicene frameworks through reversed anti-AA stack along the z direction to form segregated [6]helicene and porphyrin columnar π arrays. Notably, this π configuration enables the frameworks to be highly red luminescent with benchmark quantum yields. The [6]helicene frameworks trigger effieicnt intra-framework singlet-to-singlet state energy transfer from [6]helicene to porphyrin and facilitate intermolecular triplet-to-triplet state energy transfer from frameworks to molecular oxygen to produce reactive oxygen species, harvesting a wide range of photons from ultraviolet to near-infrared regions for light emitting and photo-to-chemical conversion. This study introduces a new family of extended frameworks, laying the groundwork for exploring well-defined helicene materials with unprecedented structures and functions.

10.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202411806, 2024 Jul 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38988007

ABSTRACT

Covalent organic frameworks are a class of crystalline porous polymers formed by linking organic units into periodically aligned skeletons and pores. Here we report a strategy for wiring these frameworks with conducting polymers via wall engineering and polymerization. We anchored each edge site with one pyrrole unit, which is densely packed along the z direction yet protruded from pore walls. This assembly enables the polymerization of pyrrole units to form polypyrrole and creates a new polypyrrole chain conformation. The resultant framework constitutes six single file polypyrrole chains in each pore and develop spatially segregated yet built-in single molecular wires with exceptional stable polarons. Hall effect measurements revealed that the materials are p-type semiconductors, increase conductivity by eight orders of magnitude compared to the pristine frameworks, and achieve a carrier mobility as large as 13.2 cm2 V-1 s-1. Our results open an avenue to π electronic frameworks by interlayer molecular wiring with conducting polymers.

11.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(16): e202400009, 2024 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38415815

ABSTRACT

Covalent organic frameworks are a novel class of crystalline porous polymers that enable molecular design of extended polygonal skeletons to attain well-defined porous structures. However, construction of a framework that allows remote control of pores remains a challenge. Here we report a strategy that merges covalent, noncovalent, and photo chemistries to design photoresponsive frameworks with reversibly and remotely controllable pores. We developed a topology-guided multicomponent polycondensation system that integrates protruded tetrafluoroazobenzene units as photoresponsive sites on pore walls at predesigned densities, so that a series of crystalline porous frameworks with the same backbone can be constructed to develop a broad spectrum of pores ranging from mesopores to micropores. Distinct from conventional azobenzene-based systems, the tetrafluoroazobenzene frameworks are highly sensitive to visible lights to undergo high-rate isomerization. The photoisomerization exerts profound effects on pore size, shape, number, and environment, as well as molecular uptake and release, rendering the system able to convert and switch pores reversibly and remotely with visible lights. Our results open a way to a novel class of smart porous materials with pore structures and functions that are convertible and manageable with visible lights.

12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(48): 26383-26392, 2023 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37983008

ABSTRACT

Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) create extended two-dimensional (2D) skeletons and aligned one-dimensional (1D) channels, constituting a class of novel π architectures with predesignable structural ordering. A distinct feature is that stacks of π building units in skeletons shape the pore walls, onto which a diversity of different units can be assembled to form various pore interfaces, opening a great potential to trigger a strong structural correlation between the skeleton and the pore. However, such a possibility has not yet been explored. Herein, we report reversible three-dimensional (3D) coalescence and interlocked actions between the skeleton and pore in COFs by controlling hydrogen-bonding networks in the pores. Introducing carboxylic acid units to the pore walls develops COFs that can confine water molecular networks, which are locked by the surface carboxylic acid units on the pore walls via multipoint, multichain, and multidirectional hydrogen-bonding interactions. As a result, the skeleton undergoes an interlocked action with pores to shrink over the x-y plane and to stack closer along the z direction upon water uptake. Remarkably, this interlocked action between the skeleton and pore is reversibly driven by water adsorption and desorption and triggers profound effects on π electronic structures and functions, including band gap, light absorption, and emission.

13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(36): 16423-16432, 2022 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35998305

ABSTRACT

To optimize the optical and optoelectronic functionalities of two-dimensional (2D) covalent organic frameworks (COFs), detailed properties of emissive and nonradiative pathways after photoexcitation need to be elucidated and linked to particular structural designs. Here, we use transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy to study the colloidal suspension of the full sp2 carbon-conjugated sp2c-COF and characterize the spatial extent and diffusion dynamics of the emissive excitons generated by impulsive photoexcitation. The ∼3.5 Šstacking distance between 2D layers results in cofacial pyrene excitons that diffuse through the framework, while the state that dominates the emissive spectrum of the polycrystalline solid is assigned to an extended cofacial exciton whose 2D delocalization is promoted by C═C linkages. The subnanosecond kinetics of a photoinduced absorption (PIA) signal in the near-infrared, attributed to a charge-separated exciton, or polaron pair, reflects three-dimensional (3D) exciton diffusion as well as long-range exciton-exciton annihilation driven by resonance interactions. Within our experimental regime, doubling the excitation intensity results in a 10-fold increase in the estimated exciton diffusion length, from ∼3 to ∼30 nm, suggesting that higher lattice temperature may enhance exciton mobility in the COF colloid.

14.
Small ; 18(50): e2205400, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36316245

ABSTRACT

Different from harvesting of ultraviolet and visible lights via electronic transitions, absorption of low-frequency electromagnetic waves is sophisticated in mechanism and poor in efficiency, imposing the structural design arduous and challenging. Here, the first example of exploring covalent organic frameworks for highly efficient absorption of low-frequency electromagnetic waves is reported. Three pyrene frameworks are synthesized and annealed into porous networks, which upon mixture with paraffin are processed into thin films with tunable thickness. The films absorb ultrabroad low-frequency electromagnetic waves covering S, C, X, and Ku bands and achieve exceptional efficiency of 99.999% with a thickness of only 2.5 mm and a loading content of only 20%. This result originates from a synergistic effect of conductivity, heteroatoms, and pores and outperforms the state-of-the-art polymers, carbons, and metals. This approach opens a way to electromagnetic wave absorption.

15.
Chem Rev ; 120(16): 8814-8933, 2020 08 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31967791

ABSTRACT

Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are a class of crystalline porous organic polymers with permanent porosity and highly ordered structures. Unlike other polymers, a significant feature of COFs is that they are structurally predesignable, synthetically controllable, and functionally manageable. In principle, the topological design diagram offers geometric guidance for the structural tiling of extended porous polygons, and the polycondensation reactions provide synthetic ways to construct the predesigned primary and high-order structures. Progress over the past decade in the chemistry of these two aspects undoubtedly established the base of the COF field. By virtue of the availability of organic units and the diversity of topologies and linkages, COFs have emerged as a new field of organic materials that offer a powerful molecular platform for complex structural design and tailor-made functional development. Here we target a comprehensive review of the COF field, provide a historic overview of the chemistry of the COF field, survey the advances in the topology design and synthetic reactions, illustrate the structural features and diversities, scrutinize the development and potential of various functions through elucidating structure-function correlations based on interactions with photons, electrons, holes, spins, ions, and molecules, discuss the key fundamental and challenging issues that need to be addressed, and predict the future directions from chemistry, physics, and materials perspectives.

16.
Environ Res ; 204(Pt A): 111949, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34478720

ABSTRACT

Photocatalysis is regarded as one of the most effective strategies for the removal of the toxic organic pollutants from aqueous solutions. However, a lack of the efficient photocatalysts prevents the widespread practical application. Herein, the electrostatic self-assembly method has been designed for facile synthesis of a novel BaSnO3/PDDA/MXene (BSO/P/MX) nanocomposite as high efficient photocatalyst. In this nanocomposite, the BaSnO3 (BSO), poly (dimethyl-diallylammonium chloride) (PDDA) and MXene (Ti3C2Tx) act as the active species, structure stabilizer and efficient electron transfer medium, respectively. Due to the strong synergy of the nanocomposite, the electron-transferring ability as well as the charge separation efficiency is boosted and thus high catalytic activity achieves towards the photodegradation of 4-nitrophenol. The superior degradation rate of 98.8% and a rate constant K of 0.09113 min-1 have been realized within 75 min of ultraviolet (UV) light irradiation over the BSO/P/MX-8% catalyst. This as-prepared nanocomposite with the excellent catalytic activity can be employed as a promising photocatalyst for treating the organic pollutants from aqueous solutions.


Subject(s)
Nanocomposites , Catalysis , Nitrophenols , Photolysis , Static Electricity
17.
Chem Soc Rev ; 50(1): 120-242, 2021 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33283811

ABSTRACT

Covalent organic frameworks offer a molecular platform for integrating organic units into periodically ordered yet extended two- and three-dimensional polymers to create topologically well-defined polygonal lattices and built-in discrete micropores and/or mesopores. This polymer architecture is unique as it enables predesigning both primary- and high-order structures, greatly enhancing our capabilities of designing organic materials to produce predictable structures and to achieve unique properties and functions. Progress over the past 15 years in the design, synthesis and functional exploration of COFs has successively established the basis of the COF field and COFs have shown the great potential of chemistry in developing a class of amazing organic materials. In this review, we focus on analysing the historic developments of COFs to uncover a full materials and application picture by providing comprehensive yet clear guidance for molecular design, synthetic control and functional exploration. We scrutinise the structural components of COFs including building blocks, reactive sites and functional groups with the aim of finding the origins of structural designability and diversity, as well as multiple functionalities. We disclose strategies for designing and synthesising frameworks to construct various tailor-made interfaces, and for exploring skeletons and pores to design properties and functions. With well-defined skeletons, pores and interfaces that offer a chemical basis to trigger and control interactions with photons, excitons, phonons, polarons, electrons, holes, spins, ions and molecules, we illustrate the current status of our understandings of structure-property correlations, and unveil the principles for establishing a regime to design unique functions that originate from and are inherent to structures. We predict the key central issues in design and synthesis, the challenges in functional design and the future directions from the perspectives of chemistry, physics and materials science.

18.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(9): e202115020, 2022 Feb 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34931425

ABSTRACT

Despite rapid progress over the past decade, most polycondensation systems even upon a small structural variation of the building units eventually result in amorphous polymers other than the desired crystalline covalent organic frameworks. This synthetic dilemma is a central and challenging issue of the field. Here we report a novel approach based on module-patterned polymerization to enable efficient and designed synthesis of crystalline porous polymeric frameworks. This strategy features a wide applicability to allow the use of various knots of different structures, enables polycondensation with diverse linkers, and develops a diversity of novel crystalline 2D polymers and frameworks, as demonstrated by using the C=C bond-formation polycondensation reaction. The new sp2 -carbon frameworks are highly emissive and enable up-conversion luminescence, offer low band gap semiconductors with tunable band structures, and achieve ultrahigh charge mobilities close to theoretically predicted maxima.

19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(24): 8970-8975, 2021 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34110806

ABSTRACT

Hydroxide anion transport is essential for alkaline fuel cells, but hydroxide anion has an inherently low conductivity owing to its small diffusion coefficient and high mass. Ordered open channels found in covalent organic frameworks are promising as pathways to enable hydroxide anion transport, but this remains to be explored. Here we report designed synthesis of anionic covalent organic frameworks that promote hydroxide anion transport across the one-dimensional channels. Engineering cationic chains with imidazolium termini onto the pore walls self-assembles a supramolecular interface of single-file hydroxide anion chains in the channels. The frameworks facilitate hydroxide anion transport to achieve an exceptional conductivity of 1.53 × 10-2 S cm-1 at 80 °C, which is 2-6 orders of magnitude higher than those of linear polymers and other porous frameworks. Impedance spectroscopy at different temperatures and studies on deuterated samples reveal that hydroxide anions transport via a proton-exchange hopping mechanism. These results open a way to design framework materials for energy conversions via engineering an anionic interface.

20.
Acc Chem Res ; 53(8): 1672-1685, 2020 08 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32786335

ABSTRACT

Nature evolves fascinating molecular pores to achieve unique biological functions based on a single pore or channel as observed for aquaporins and ion channels. An artificial system, on the other hand, explores porous structures to construct dense pores in materials. Progress in chemistry over the past century has greatly improved our capability to synthesize porous materials. This is evident by the advancement from inorganic to organic units, from trial-and-error tests to module fabrication and further to fully predesignable pores, and from harsh preparation protocols to ambient synthetic methods. Over the past 15 years, a molecular platform based on organic and polymer chemistry has been explored to enable the design of artificial pores to achieve different pore size, shape, wall, and interface. This becomes possible with a class of emerging polymer-covalent organic frameworks (COFs). COFs are a class of crystalline porous polymers that integrate organic units into extended molecular frameworks with periodically ordered skeletons and well-defined pores. We have focused on exploring COFs over the past 15 years to design and synthesize porous structures with the aim of developing chemistry that leads to the creation of tailor-made pore interfaces (Nagai, A. et al. Nat. Commun., 2011, 2, 536). In this Account, we summarize the general concept of our approaches to various pore interfaces by emphasizing design principle, synthetic strategy, and distinct porous features and their impacts. We illustrate pore interface design by highlighting general strategies based on direct polymerization and pore surface engineering to construct different pore walls with a diversity of functional units. One distinct feature is that these functional groups are predesigned and synthetically controlled to achieve a predetermined component, position, and density, leading to a general way to install various specific pore wall interfaces to each pore. We showcase hierarchical pore interface architectures by elucidating the nature of interplays between interfaces and molecules and ions, ranging broadly from hydrogen bond to dipole-dipole/quadrupole interactions, electrostatic interaction, acid-base interaction, coordination, and electronic interactions. We scrutinize the unique properties and functions of adsorption and separation, catalysis, energy transformation and storage, and proton and metal ion transport by disclosing functional design schemes and interface-function correlations. We predict the fundamental key issues to be addressed and show future directions in designing artificial pores to target at ultimate functions. This chemistry on pore interface engineering opens a way to porous materials that have remained challenging in the predesign of both structure and function.

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