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      Crystal engineering of coordination polymers using 4,4′-bipyridine as a bond between transition metal atoms

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          Functional Porous Coordination Polymers

          The chemistry of the coordination polymers has in recent years advanced extensively, affording various architectures, which are constructed from a variety of molecular building blocks with different interactions between them. The next challenge is the chemical and physical functionalization of these architectures, through the porous properties of the frameworks. This review concentrates on three aspects of coordination polymers: 1). the use of crystal engineering to construct porous frameworks from connectors and linkers ("nanospace engineering"), 2). characterizing and cataloging the porous properties by functions for storage, exchange, separation, etc., and 3). the next generation of porous functions based on dynamic crystal transformations caused by guest molecules or physical stimuli. Our aim is to present the state of the art chemistry and physics of and in the micropores of porous coordination polymers.
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            Modular chemistry: secondary building units as a basis for the design of highly porous and robust metal-organic carboxylate frameworks.

            Secondary building units (SBUs) are molecular complexes and cluster entities in which ligand coordination modes and metal coordination environments can be utilized in the transformation of these fragments into extended porous networks using polytopic linkers (1,4-benzenedicarboxylate, 1,3,5,7-adamantanetetracarboxylate, etc.). Consideration of the geometric and chemical attributes of the SBUs and linkers leads to prediction of the framework topology, and in turn to the design and synthesis of a new class of porous materials with robust structures and high porosity.
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              From Molecules to Crystal Engineering:  Supramolecular Isomerism and Polymorphism in Network Solids

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                CHCOFS
                Chem. Commun.
                Chem. Commun.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1359-7345
                1364-548X
                2006
                2006
                :
                : 40
                : 4169-4179
                Article
                10.1039/B606184B
                b047380a-a0e3-4360-a0af-f50e79c9c140
                © 2006
                History

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