Abstract
Bond breaking is an essential process in chemical transformations and the ability of researchers to strategically dictate which bonds in a given system will be broken translates to greater synthetic control. Here, we report extending the concept of selective bond breaking to reticular materials in a new synthetic approach that we call Clip-off Chemistry. We show that bond-breaking in these structures can be controlled at the molecular level; is periodic, quantitative, and selective; is effective in reactions performed in either solid or liquid phases; and can occur in a single-crystal-to-single-crystal fashion involving the entire bulk precursor sample. We validate Clip-off Chemistry by synthesizing two topologically distinct 3D metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) from two reported 3D MOFs, and a metal-organic macrocycle from metal-organic polyhedra (MOP). Clip-off Chemistry opens the door to the programmed disassembly of reticular materials and thus to the design and synthesis of new molecules and materials.
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CITATION STYLE
Yang, Y., Broto-Ribas, A., Ortín-Rubio, B., Imaz, I., Gándara, F., Carné-Sánchez, A., … Maspoch, D. (2022). Clip-off Chemistry: Synthesis by Programmed Disassembly of Reticular Materials**. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 61(4). https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202111228
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