Supramolecular organic frameworks (SOFs), synthetic frameworks assembled via non-covalent interactions, are being extensively studied for their applications as porous functional solids endowed with flexibility, reversibility and tunability of stimuli-responsive properties. This review explores the use of mechanosynthesis as a versatile strategy for their rational design and green synthesis, while expanding their structural and functional diversity. After an overview of the path followed by supramolecular mechanochemistry from the assembly of cocrystals to the complexation of host-guest systems in the solid state, we have detailed the mechanosynthesis of hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) and the less-explored halogen-bonded organic frameworks (XOFs), highlighting the advantages of solid-state methods in promoting reactivity, sustainability, and access to otherwise unattainable architectures.
Pushing the boundaries: The path of mechanosynthesis toward the assembly of supramolecular organic frameworks / Marchetti, D.; Testa, R.; Pedrini, A.; Massera, C.. - In: COORDINATION CHEMISTRY REVIEWS. - ISSN 0010-8545. - 555:(2026). [10.1016/j.ccr.2026.217600]
Pushing the boundaries: The path of mechanosynthesis toward the assembly of supramolecular organic frameworks
Marchetti D.;Testa R.;Pedrini A.;Massera C.
2026-01-01
Abstract
Supramolecular organic frameworks (SOFs), synthetic frameworks assembled via non-covalent interactions, are being extensively studied for their applications as porous functional solids endowed with flexibility, reversibility and tunability of stimuli-responsive properties. This review explores the use of mechanosynthesis as a versatile strategy for their rational design and green synthesis, while expanding their structural and functional diversity. After an overview of the path followed by supramolecular mechanochemistry from the assembly of cocrystals to the complexation of host-guest systems in the solid state, we have detailed the mechanosynthesis of hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) and the less-explored halogen-bonded organic frameworks (XOFs), highlighting the advantages of solid-state methods in promoting reactivity, sustainability, and access to otherwise unattainable architectures.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


