Issue 35, 2021

Melt-quenched porous organic cage glasses

Abstract

The discrete molecular nature of porous organic cages (POCs) has allowed us to direct the formation of crystalline materials by crystal engineering. It has also been possible to create porous amorphous solids by deliberately disrupting the crystalline packing, either with chemical modification or by processing. More recently, organic cages were used to form isotropic porous liquids. However, the connection between solid and liquid states of POCs, and the glass state, are almost completely unexplored. Here, we investigate the melting and glass-forming behaviour of a range of organic cages, including both shape-persistent POCs formed by imine condensation, and reduced and synthetically post-modified amine POCs that are more flexible and lack shape-persistence. The organic cages exhibited melting and quenching of the resultant liquids provides molecular glasses. One of these molecular glasses exhibited improved gas uptake for both CO2 and CH4 compared to the starting amorphous cage. In addition, foaming of the liquid in one case resulted in a more stable and less soluble glass, which demonstrates the potential for an alternative approach to forming materials such as membranes without solution processing.

Graphical abstract: Melt-quenched porous organic cage glasses

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Mar 2021
Accepted
28 Apr 2021
First published
04 May 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2021,9, 19807-19816

Melt-quenched porous organic cage glasses

M. C. Brand, F. Greenwell, R. Clowes, B. D. Egleston, A. Kai, A. I. Cooper, T. D. Bennett and R. L. Greenaway, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2021, 9, 19807 DOI: 10.1039/D1TA01906F

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