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      Recent advances in metal-organic-framework-based catalysts for thermocatalytic selective oxidation of organic substances

      , , , , ,
      Chem Catalysis
      Elsevier BV

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          Catalysis and photocatalysis by metal organic frameworks

          This review aims to provide different strategies employed to use MOFs as solid catalysts and photocatalysts in organic transformations. Metal organic frameworks (MOFs) are a class of porous crystalline materials that feature a series of unique properties, such as large surface area and porosity, high content of transition metals, and possibility to be designed and modified after synthesis, that make these solids especially suitable as heterogeneous catalysts. The active sites can be coordinatively unsaturated metal ions, substituents at the organic linkers or guest species located inside the pores. The defects on the structure also create these open sites. The present review summarizes the current state of the art in the use of MOFs as solid catalysts according to the type of site, making special emphasis on the more recent strategies to increase the population of these active sites and tuning their activity, either by adapting the synthesis conditions or by post-synthetic modification. This review highlights those reports illustrating the synergy derived from the presence of more than one of these types of sites, leading to activation of a substrate by more than one site or to the simultaneous activation of different substrates by complementary sites. This synergy is frequently the main reason for the higher catalytic activity of MOFs compared to homogeneous catalysts or other alternative solid materials. Besides dark reactions, this review also summarizes the use of MOFs as photocatalysts emphasizing the uniqueness of these materials regarding adaptation of the linkers as light absorbers and metal exchange at the nodes to enhance photoinduced electron transfer, in comparison with conventional inorganic photocatalysts. This versatility and flexibility that is offered by MOFs to optimize their visible light photocatalytic activity explains the current interest in exploiting these materials for novel photocatalytic reactions, including hydrogen evolution and photocatalytic CO 2 reduction.
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            Improving MOF stability: approaches and applications

            This review summarizes recent advances in the design and synthesis of stable MOFs and highlights the relationships between the stability and functional applications.
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              Light-harvesting metal-organic frameworks (MOFs): efficient strut-to-strut energy transfer in bodipy and porphyrin-based MOFs.

              A pillared-paddlewheel type metal-organic framework material featuring bodipy- and porphyrin-based struts, and capable of harvesting light across the entire visible spectrum, has been synthesized. Efficient-essentially quantitative-strut-to-strut energy transfer (antenna behavior) was observed for the well-organized donor-acceptor assembly consituting the ordered MOF structure.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Chem Catalysis
                Chem Catalysis
                Elsevier BV
                26671093
                May 2022
                May 2022
                : 2
                : 5
                : 1009-1045
                Article
                10.1016/j.checat.2022.02.010
                662afe21-9a7d-47d1-9503-5ecafc13acff
                © 2022

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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