Defect engineering: an effective tool for enhancing the catalytic performance of copper-MOFs for the click reaction and the A3 coupling†
Abstract
A series of Cu(I)-enriched metal–organic frameworks (MOF) of the type CuBTC (BTC = benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxylate) was prepared by a mixed-linker defect engineering technique, namely substituting a portion of a parent linker with truncated pyridine-3,5-dicarboxylate (PyDC) in the synthesis process. The reduced carboxyl coordination sites and the emerged Lewis basic pyridyl sites of PyDC spawned mixed-valence Cu(I)–Cu(II) paddlewheels (PWs) in the defect-engineered CuBTC (DE-CuBTC) structure. Cu(I)-enriched DE-CuBTC shows significantly enhanced catalytic performance for the click reaction of azide–alkyne cycloaddition by accelerating the rate determining step of Cu(I)–acetylide intermediate formation. To further evaluate the catalytic activity of Cu(I)-enriched DE-CuBTC for reactions involving a Cu(I)–acetylide intermediate, the A3 coupling reaction of phenylacetylene, paraformaldehyde and piperidine was studied as well. This study shows that defect engineering is an effective editing tool of catalytic active sites in catalysts.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Bioorthogonal and click chemistry: Celebrating the 2022 Nobel Prize in Chemistry