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Coordination polymers (CPs), including metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), are crystalline materials with promising applications in electronics, magnetism, catalysis, and gas storage/separation. However, the mechanisms and pathways underlying their formation remain largely undisclosed. Herein, we demonstrate that diffusion-controlled mixing of reagents at the very early stages of the crystallization process (i.e., within ≈40 ms), achieved by using continuous-flow microfluidic devices, can be used to enable novel crystallization pathways of a prototypical spin-crossover MOF towards its thermodynamic product. In particular, two distinct and unprecedented nucleation-growth pathways were experimentally observed when crystallization was triggered under microfluidic mixing. Full-atom molecular dynamics simulations also confirm the occurrence of these two distinct pathways during crystal growth. In sharp contrast, a crystallization by particle attachment was observed under bulk (turbulent) mixing. These unprecedented results provide a sound basis for understanding the growth of CPs and open up new avenues for the engineering of porous materials by using out-of-equilibrium conditions.
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Puigmartí-Luis, Josep Calvo Galve, Néstor Abrishamkar, Afshin Sorrenti, Alessandro Di Rienzo, Lorenzo Satta, Mauro D'Abramo, Marco Coronado Miralles, Eugenio De Mello, Andrew J. Mínguez Espallargas, Guillermo 2021 Exploiting Reaction-Diffusion Conditions to Trigger Pathway Complexity in the Growth of a MOF Angewandte Chemie 60 29 15920 15927 |