Login / Signup

Analogy Powered by Prediction and Structural Invariants: Computationally Led Discovery of a Mesoporous Hydrogen-Bonded Organic Cage Crystal.

Qiang ZhuJay JohalDaniel E WiddowsonZhongfu PangBoyu LiChristopher M KaneVitaliy KurlinGraeme M DayMarc A LittleAndrew I Cooper
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Mesoporous molecular crystals have potential applications in separation and catalysis, but they are rare and hard to design because many weak interactions compete during crystallization, and most molecules have an energetic preference for close packing. Here, we combine crystal structure prediction (CSP) with structural invariants to continuously qualify the similarity between predicted crystal structures for related molecules. This allows isomorphous substitution strategies, which can be unreliable for molecular crystals, to be augmented by a priori prediction, thus leveraging the power of both approaches. We used this combined approach to discover a rare example of a low-density (0.54 g cm -3 ) mesoporous hydrogen-bonded framework (HOF), 3D-CageHOF-1 . This structure comprises an organic cage ( Cage-3-NH 2 ) that was predicted to form kinetically trapped, low-density polymorphs via CSP. Pointwise distance distribution structural invariants revealed five predicted forms of Cage-3-NH 2 that are analogous to experimentally realized porous crystals of a chemically different but geometrically similar molecule, T2 . More broadly, this approach overcomes the difficulties in comparing predicted molecular crystals with varying lattice parameters, thus allowing for the systematic comparison of energy-structure landscapes for chemically dissimilar molecules.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • crystal structure
  • metal organic framework
  • highly efficient
  • small molecule
  • single molecule
  • ionic liquid
  • visible light
  • risk assessment
  • mass spectrometry
  • climate change
  • liquid chromatography