Transition Behaviors of Isostructural Hydrogen‐Bonded Frameworks Composed of Naphthalene, Quinoxaline, and Pyrazinopyrazine Derivatives

Author:

Kubo Haruka1ORCID,Konishi Shunsuke2,Oketani Ryusei1ORCID,Hayashi Takashi2ORCID,Hisaki Ichiro1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science Osaka University 1-3 Machikaneyama Toyonaka, Osaka 560-8531 Japan

2. Department of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Osaka University 2-1 Yamadaoka Suita, Osaka 565-0871 Japan

Abstract

AbstractA series of isostructural reticular frameworks with systematic differences on chemical structures allows us to disclose correlations between specific structural factors and properties, providing insights for designing novel porous materials. However, even slight differences in the molecular structure often lead to non‐isostructural polymorphic frameworks particularly in the case of hydrogen‐bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) because the structures of HOFs are based on a subtle balance of reversible interactions. In this study, we found that three simple analogues of tetracarboxylic acids with naphthalene, quinoxaline, and pyrazinopyrazine cores (NT, QX, and PP, respectively) yielded isostructural solvated HOFs (NT‐1, QX‐1, and PP‐1, respectively), where hydrogen‐bonded sql‐networked sheets were slip‐stacked with closely similar manners. More importantly, these isostructural HOFs underwent structural transformations in different manners upon removal of the guest solvents. Comparison of the crystal structures of the HOFs before and after the transformation revealed that intermolecular interactions of the core significantly affected on rearrangements of hydrogen bonds in the transformation. The results suggest the potential to control the properties and functions of isostructural HOFs by elements in the core.

Funder

Japan Science and Technology Corporation

Hoansha Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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