Experimental Confirmation of a Predicted Porous Hydrogen-Bonded Organic Framework

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Abstract

Hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) with low densities and high porosities are rare and challenging to design because most molecules have a strong energetic preference for close packing. Crystal structure prediction (CSP) can rank the crystal packings available to an organic molecule based on their relative lattice energies. This has become a powerful tool for the a priori design of porous molecular crystals. Previously, we combined CSP with structure-property predictions to generate energy-structure-function (ESF) maps for a series of triptycene-based molecules with quinoxaline groups. From these ESF maps, triptycene trisquinoxalinedione (TH5) was predicted to form a previously unknown low-energy HOF (TH5-A) with a remarkably low density of 0.374 g cm−3 and three-dimensional (3D) pores. Here, we demonstrate the reliability of those ESF maps by discovering this TH5-A polymorph experimentally. This material has a high accessible surface area of 3,284 m2 g−1, as measured by nitrogen adsorption, making it one of the most porous HOFs reported to date.

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Shields, C. E., Wang, X., Fellowes, T., Clowes, R., Chen, L., Day, G. M., … Cooper, A. I. (2023). Experimental Confirmation of a Predicted Porous Hydrogen-Bonded Organic Framework. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 62(34). https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202303167

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