Issue 5, 2009

Design and synthesis of metal–organic frameworks using metal–organic polyhedra as supermolecular building blocks

Abstract

This critical review highlights supermolecular building blocks (SBBs) in the context of their impact upon the design, synthesis, and structure of metal–organic materials (MOMs). MOMs, also known as coordination polymers, hybrid inorganic–organic materials, and metal–organic frameworks, represent an emerging class of materials that have attracted the imagination of solid-state chemists because MOMs combine unprecedented levels of porosity with a range of other functional properties that occur through the metal moiety and/or the organic ligand. First generation MOMs exploited the geometry of metal ions or secondary building units (SBUs), small metal clusters that mimic polygons, for the generation of MOMs. In this critical review we examine the recent (<5 years) adoption of much larger scale metal–organic polyhedra (MOPs) as SBBs for the construction of MOMs by highlighting how the large size and high symmetry of such SBBs can afford improved control over the topology of the resulting MOM and a new level of scale to the resulting framework (204 references).

Graphical abstract: Design and synthesis of metal–organic frameworks using metal–organic polyhedra as supermolecular building blocks

Article information

Article type
Critical Review
Submitted
23 Oct 2008
First published
03 Mar 2009

Chem. Soc. Rev., 2009,38, 1400-1417

Design and synthesis of metal–organic frameworks using metal–organic polyhedra as supermolecular building blocks

J. J. Perry IV, J. A. Perman and M. J. Zaworotko, Chem. Soc. Rev., 2009, 38, 1400 DOI: 10.1039/B807086P

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