Covalent organic frameworks in heterogeneous catalysis: recent advances and future perspective
Abstract
Catalysis is ubiquitous in ∼90% of chemical manufacturing processes and contributes up to 35% of global GDP. Hence, the development of advanced catalytic systems is of utmost importance for academia, industry, and government. Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are a rapidly emerging class of crystalline porous materials that precisely integrate organic monomer units into extended periodic networks, offering a propitious platform for heterogeneous catalysis due to salient structural merits of ultralow density, high crystallinity, permanent porosity, structural tunability, functional diversity, and synthetic versatility. The past decade has witnessed an upsurge of interest in COFs for heterogeneous catalysis and this trend is expected to continue. In this review, we briefly introduce COF chemistry concerning the design principles, growth mechanism, and cutting-edge advances in structural evolution, linkage chemistry, and facile synthesis. We then scrutinize four leading design strategies for COF catalysts, namely pristine COFs with catalytically active backbones, COFs as hosts for the inclusion of catalytic species, COF-based heterostructures, and COF-derived carbons for thermo-, photo-, and electrocatalysis. Next, we overview the most recent advances (mainly from 2020 to 2023) of COFs in heterogeneous catalysis, along with their fundamentals and advantages. Finally, we outline the current challenges and offer our perspectives on the future directions of COFs for heterogeneous catalysis.
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2023 Materials Chemistry Frontiers Review-type Articles