Publication | Closed Access
Crystalline Inorganic Frameworks with 56-Ring, 64-Ring, and 72-Ring Channels
164
Citations
29
References
2013
Year
EngineeringNanoporous MaterialChannel SizeLow Thermal StabilityChemistryCrystalline Inorganic FrameworksInorganic MaterialZeoliteMaterials ScienceInorganic ChemistryMolecular SieveNanotechnologyCovalent Bonded FrameworkCrystallographyCrystal Structure DesignNanomaterialsZeolite-like StructuresFunctional MaterialsOrganic-inorganic Hybrid Material
The development of zeolite-like structures with extra-large pores (>12-membered rings, 12R) has been sporadic and is currently at 30R. In general, templating via molecules leads to crystalline frameworks, whereas the use of organized assemblies that permit much larger pores produces noncrystalline frameworks. Synthetic methods that generate crystallinity from both discrete templates and organized assemblies represent a viable design strategy for developing crystalline porous inorganic frameworks spanning the micro and meso regimes. We show that by integrating templating mechanisms for both zeolites and mesoporous silica in a single system, the channel size for gallium zincophosphites can be systematically tuned from 24R and 28R to 40R, 48R, 56R, 64R, and 72R. Although the materials have low thermal stability and retain their templating agents, single-activator doping of Mn(2+) can create white-light photoluminescence.
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