JOURNAL ARTICLE

Covalent organic frameworks form processable colloids

MITCH JACOBY

Year: 2017 Journal:   C&EN Global Enterprise Vol: 95 (4)Pages: 8-8   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are crystalline porous polymers with features that include having a pore size that can be tailored by choosing suitable building blocks. Researchers are examining COFs and other types of framework compounds for use as selective membranes, catalyst supports, and other applications. But COFs tend to form tough-to-process insoluble microcrystalline powders, thwarting those efforts. Help may now be on the way thanks to a study reporting a method to prepare COFs as stable colloidal suspensions by inhibiting the usual irreversible crystallite aggregation and precipitation (ACS Cent. Sci. 2017, DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.6b00331). A team led by William R. Dichtel of Northwestern University and Nathan C. Gianneschi of the University of California, San Diego, studied a boronate ester-linked hydroxytriphenylene material known as COF-5. On the basis of X-ray scattering, liquid-cell microscopy, and other analytical methods, the team determined that nitrile solvents impede crystallite aggregation yet do not inhibit framework polymerization.

Keywords:
Crystallite Covalent bond Nitrile Materials science Polymer Membrane Polymerization Polymer science Nanotechnology Porosity Colloid Chemical engineering Covalent organic framework Polymer chemistry Chemistry Organic chemistry Composite material Engineering

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Topics

Covalent Organic Framework Applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Chemical Synthesis and Reactions
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Organic Chemistry

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