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      Porous organic polymers: a promising platform for efficient photocatalysis

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          Abstract

          This review summarizes the latest advances of porous organic polymers (POPs) focusing on their applications in photocatalysis, including photocatalytic chemical transformations, photodetoxification of pollutants from water, and water splitting.

          Abstract

          Porous organic polymers (POPs) are a class of multi-dimensional porous network materials, which are built via strong covalent linkages between various organic building blocks with different geometries and topologies, and have recently become a rising research field in porous materials. POPs can be generally divided into two categories based on their degree of long-range order, including amorphous ( e.g., CMPs, HCPs, PIMs, and PAFs) and crystalline ( e.g., COFs). Owning to their advantages of light-weight, superior inherent porosity, excellent stability, pre-designable and tunable structures and functions, POPs have received increasing attention and research interest for their tremendous potential applications in gas storage/separation, heterogeneous catalysis, photoelectric conversion, chemical- and bio-sensing, energy storage and conversion, etc. Their porous structure, pore size, specific surface areas and functions can be directly designed and facilely tuned by introducing specific functional building blocks. In this review article, we summarize the latest representative advances in the field of POPs, focusing on their design and synthetic strategies, with emphasis on their specific applications in photocatalysis, including photocatalytic chemical transformation, photodetoxification of contaminants from water, and water splitting.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          MCFAC5
          Materials Chemistry Frontiers
          Mater. Chem. Front.
          Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
          2052-1537
          February 7 2020
          2020
          : 4
          : 2
          : 332-353
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Chemistry
          [2 ]Institute of Molecular Plus
          [3 ]Tianjin Key Laboratory of Molecular Optoelectronic Science
          [4 ]Tianjin University
          [5 ]Tianjin 300072
          Article
          10.1039/C9QM00633H
          e95f09cf-68c9-4a8f-b775-8936490d777d
          © 2020

          http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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