Toward
Covalent Organic Frameworks Bearing Three Different
Kinds of Pores: The Strategy for Construction and COF-to-COF Transformation
via Heterogeneous Linker Exchange
Covalent
organic frameworks (COFs) are an emerging class of crystalline
porous organic materials which are fabricated via reticular chemistry.
Their topologic structures can be precisely predicted on the basis
of the structures of building blocks. However, constructing COFs with
complicated structures has remained a great challenge, due to the
limited strategies that can access to the structural complexity of
COFs. In this work, we have developed a new approach to produce COFs
bearing three different kinds of pores. The design is fulfilled by
the combination of vertex-truncation with multiple-linking-site strategy.
On the basis of this design, a “V”-shaped building block
carrying two aldehyde groups on the end of each branch has been synthesized.
Condensation of it with 1,4-diaminobenzene or benzidine leads to the
formation of two triple-pore COFs, TP-COF-DAB and TP-COF-BZ, respectively. The topological structures of the
triple-pore COFs have been confirmed by PXRD studies, synchrotron
small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) experiments, theoretical simulations,
and pore size distribution analyses. Furthermore, for the first time,
an in situ COF-to-COF transformation has also been achieved by heating TP-COF-BZ with 1,4-diaminobenzene under solvothermal condition,
which leads to the formation of TP-COF-DAB via in situ
replacing the benzidine linkers in TP-COF-BZ with 1,4-diaminobenzene
linkers.