Synthesis of Polycarboxylate Rhodium(II) Metal-Organic Polyhedra (MOPs) and their use as Building Blocks for Highly Connected Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs).
Thais GranchaArnau Carné-SanchezFarnoosh ZarekariziLaura Hernández-LópezJorge AlbaladAkim KhobotovVincent GuillermAli MorsaliJudith JuanhuixFelipe GándaraInhar ImazDaniel MaspochPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Use of preformed metal-organic polyhedra (MOPs) as supermolecular building blocks (SBBs) for the synthesis of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) remains underexplored due to lack of robust functionalized MOPs. Herein we report the use of polycarboxylate cuboctahedral RhII -MOPs for constructing highly-connected MOFs. Cuboctahedral MOPs were functionalized with carboxylic acid groups on their 12 vertices or 24 edges through coordinative or covalent post-synthetic routes, respectively. We then used each isolated polycarboxylate RhII -MOP as 12-c cuboctahedral or 24-c rhombicuboctahedral SBBs that, upon linkage with metallic secondary building units (SBUs), afford bimetallic highly-connected MOFs. The assembly of a pre-synthesized 12-c SBB with a 4-c paddle-wheel SBU, and a 24-c SBB with a 3-c triangular CuII SBU gave rise to bimetallic MOFs having ftw (4,12)-c or rht (3,24)-c topologies, respectively.