Issue 45, 2011

Targeted synthesis of an electroactive organic framework

Abstract

A new strategy for targeted design and synthesis of an electroactive microporous organic molecular sieve (JUC-Z2) is described. Experiment demonstrated that such a targeted synthesis approach to achieve phenylphenyl coupling was a controllable process and predominately generated two-dimensional polymer sheets, significantly different from the traditional chemical or electrochemical oxidation methods to prepare conducting polymers. Successive self-assembly leads to a lamellar organic framework comprised of stacked polymer sheets with an hcb topology. JUC-Z2 was found to have a well-defined uniform micropore distribution (∼1.2 nm), a large surface area (BET = 2081 m2 g−1) and high physicochemical stability (>440 °C). After doping with I2, JUC-Z2 exhibits typical p-type semiconductive properties. As the first example of an electroactive organic framework, JUC-Z2 possesses a unique ability of electrochemical ion recognition, arising from the synergistic function of the uniform micropores and the N-atom redox site.

Graphical abstract: Targeted synthesis of an electroactive organic framework

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Jun 2011
Accepted
11 Aug 2011
First published
05 Oct 2011

J. Mater. Chem., 2011,21, 18208-18214

Targeted synthesis of an electroactive organic framework

T. Ben, K. Shi, Y. Cui, C. Pei, Y. Zuo, H. Guo, D. Zhang, J. Xu, F. Deng, Z. Tian and S. Qiu, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 18208 DOI: 10.1039/C1JM12545A

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