ABSTRACT
As compared to porous network solids, including metal-organic frameworks, covalent-organic frameworks, porous aromatic frameworks, and zeolites, porous molecular materials are relatively unexplored. Additionally, within porous molecular space, porous organic cages (POCs) have been the most widely reported over the past decade. Relatively recently, however, porous hybrid metal-organic molecular complexes have received considerable attention with a large fraction of surface areas for these coordination cages reported over the past three years. This review focuses on advances in this area. We highlight the recent work with permanently microporous metal-organic polyhedra (MOPs). Analogous to early work in the area of MOFs, the vast majority of MOPs for which surface areas have been reported have been based on paddlewheel building units and carboxylate ligands. We describe the synthesis of porous cages and highlight those based on monometallic, bimetallic, trimetallic, tetrametallic, and higher nuclearity clusters. Finally, we showcase work wherein the porosity of MOPs has been leveraged for applications related to the storage and separation of small molecules and the incorporation of these porous and potentially porous cages into membranes.
ABSTRACT
Porous molecular solids are promising materials for gas storage and gas separation applications. However, given the relative dearth of structural information concerning these materials, additional studies are vital for further understanding their properties and developing design parameters for their optimization. Here, we examine a series of isostructural cuboctahedral, paddlewheel-based coordination cages, M24(tBu-bdc)24 (M = Cr, Mo, Ru; tBu-bdc2- = 5-tert-butylisophthalate), for high-pressure methane storage. As the decrease in crystallinity upon activation of these porous molecular materials precludes diffraction studies, we turn to a related class of pillared coordination cage-based metal-organic frameworks, M24(Me-bdc)24(dabco)6 (M = Fe, Co; Me-bdc2- = 5-methylisophthalate; dabco = 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane) for neutron diffraction studies. The five porous materials display BET surface areas from 1057-1937 m2/g and total methane uptake capacities of up to 143 cm3(STP)/cm3. Both the porous cages and cage-based frameworks display methane adsorption enthalpies of -15 to -22 kJ/mol. Also supported by molecular modeling, neutron diffraction studies indicate that the triangular windows of the cage are favorable methane adsorption sites with CD4-arene interactions between 3.7 and 4.1 Å. At both low and high loadings, two additional methane adsorption sites on the exterior surface of the cage are apparent for a total of 56 adsorption sites per cage. These results show that M24L24 cages are competent gas storage materials and further adsorption sites may be optimized by judicious ligand functionalization to control extracage pore space.
ABSTRACT
Although gas adsorption properties of extended three-dimensional metal-organic materials have been widely studied, they remain relatively unexplored in porous molecular systems. This is particularly the case for porous coordination cages for which surface areas are typically not reported. Herein, we report the synthesis, characterization, activation, and gas adsorption properties of a family of carbazole-based cages. The chromium analog displays a coordination cage record BET (Brunauer-Emmett-Teller) surface area of 1235 m2/g. With precise synthesis and activation procedures, two previously reported cages similarly display high surface areas. The materials exhibit high methane adsorption capacities at 65 bar with the chromium(II) cage displaying CH4 capacities of 194 cm3/g and 148 cm3/cm3. This high uptake is a result of optimal pore design, which was confirmed via powder neutron diffraction experiments.
Subject(s)
Methane/chemistry , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Adsorption , Models, Molecular , Particle Size , Porosity , Surface PropertiesABSTRACT
Coordination assemblies containing transition-metal cations with coordinatively unsaturated sites remain a challenging target in the synthesis of porous molecules. Herein, we report the design, synthesis, and characterization of three porous hybrid inorganic/organic porous molecular assemblies based on cobalt(II) and nickel(II). Precise tuning of ligand functionalization allows for the isolation of molecular species in addition to two- and three-dimensional metal-organic frameworks. The cobaltous and nickelous cage compounds display excellent thermal stabilities in excess of 473 K and Brunauer-Emmett-Teller surface areas on the order of 200 m2/g. The precise ligand functionalization utilized here to control phases between discrete molecules and higher-dimensional solids can potentially further be tuned to optimize the porosity and solubility in future molecular systems.
ABSTRACT
The molecular nature, and thus potential solubility, of coordination cages endows them with a number of advantages as compared to metal-organic frameworks and other extended network solids. However, their lack of three-dimensional connectivity typically limits their thermal stability as inter-cage interactions in these materials are relatively weak. This is particularly the case for carbazole-based coordination cages. Here, we report the design and synthesis of a benzyl-functionalized octahedral coordination cage that displays moderate surface area and increased thermal stability as compared to its unfunctionalized counterpart. Structural analysis suggests the increased thermal stability is a result of aryl-aryl interactions between ligand groups on adjacent cages. We have further adapted the ligand synthesis strategy to afford a novel, high-yielding preparatory route for the isolation of carbazole-3,6-dicarboxylic acid that does not rely on pyrophoric reagents or transition metal catalysts.
ABSTRACT
Because of a charge-dipole interaction involving nonbonding electron pairs on fluorine, protonation of trifluoromethyl allenes leads to tri- or tetrasubstituted alkenes with high (Z)-selectivity. Treatment of the same allenes with catalytic Au(I) initiates a reaction cascade that produces isoxazolines in high yield.
ABSTRACT
A subset of coordination cages have garnered considerable recent attention for their potential permanent porosity in the solid state. Herein, we report a series of functionalized carbazole-based cages of the structure type M12(R-cdc)12 (M = Cr, Cu, Mo) where the functional groups include a range of aromatic substituents. Single-crystal X-ray structure determinations reveal a variety of intercage interactions in these materials, largely governed by pi-pi stacking. Density functional theory for a subset of these cages was used to confirm that the nature of the increased stability of aryl-functionalized cages is a result of inter-cage ligand interactions.