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Jacopo Andreo

Basque Center for Materials, Applications and Nanostructures

ORCID: 0000-0002-8153-5802

Publishes on X-ray Diffraction in Crystallography, Crystallization and Solubility Studies, Metal-Organic Frameworks: Synthesis and Applications. 63 papers and 1.5k citations.

63Publications
1.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

25 Years of Reticular Chemistry
Ralph Freund, Stefano Canossa, Seth M. Cohen et al.|Angewandte Chemie International Edition|2021
Cited by 409Open Access

At its core, reticular chemistry has translated the precision and expertise of organic and inorganic synthesis to the solid state. While initial excitement over metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and covalent organic frameworks (COFs) was undoubtedly fueled by their unprecedented porosity and surface areas, the most profound scientific innovation of the field has been the elaboration of design strategies for the synthesis of extended crystalline solids through strong directional bonds. In this contribution we highlight the different classes of reticular materials that have been developed, how these frameworks can be functionalized, and how complexity can be introduced into their backbones. Finally, we show how the structural control over these materials is being extended from the molecular scale to their crystal morphology and shape on the nanoscale, all the way to their shaping on the bulk scale.

MOF Synthesis Prediction Enabled by Automatic Data Mining and Machine Learning**
Yi Luo, Saientan Bag, Orysia Zaremba et al.|Angewandte Chemie International Edition|2022
Cited by 224Open Access

Despite rapid progress in the field of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), the potential of using machine learning (ML) methods to predict MOF synthesis parameters is still untapped. Here, we show how ML can be used for rationalization and acceleration of the MOF discovery process by directly predicting the synthesis conditions of a MOF based on its crystal structure. Our approach is based on: i) establishing the first MOF synthesis database via automatic extraction of synthesis parameters from the literature, ii) training and optimizing ML models by employing the MOF database, and iii) predicting the synthesis conditions for new MOF structures. The ML models, even at an initial stage, exhibit a good prediction performance, outperforming human expert predictions, obtained through a synthesis survey. The automated synthesis prediction is available via a web-tool on https://mof-synthesis.aimat.science.

Reticular Nanoscience: Bottom-Up Assembly Nanotechnology
Jacopo Andreo, Romy Ettlinger, Orysia Zaremba et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2022
Cited by 89

The chemistry of metal-organic and covalent organic frameworks (MOFs and COFs) is perhaps the most diverse and inclusive among the chemical sciences, and yet it can be radically expanded by blending it with nanotechnology. The result is reticular nanoscience, an area of reticular chemistry that has an immense potential in virtually any technological field. In this perspective, we explore the extension of such an interdisciplinary reach by surveying the explored and unexplored possibilities that framework nanoparticles can offer. We localize these unique nanosized reticular materials at the juncture between the molecular and the macroscopic worlds, and describe the resulting synthetic and analytical chemistry, which is fundamentally different from conventional frameworks. Such differences are mirrored in the properties that reticular nanoparticles exhibit, which we described while referring to the present state-of-the-art and future promising applications in medicine, catalysis, energy-related applications, and sensors. Finally, the bottom-up approach of reticular nanoscience, inspired by nature, is brought to its full extension by introducing the concept of augmented reticular chemistry. Its approach departs from a single-particle scale to reach higher mesoscopic and even macroscopic dimensions, where framework nanoparticles become building units themselves and the resulting supermaterials approach new levels of sophistication of structures and properties.

Autoluminescent Metal–Organic Frameworks (MOFs): Self-Photoemission of a Highly Stable Thorium MOF
Jacopo Andreo, Emanuele Priola, Gabriele Alberto et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2018
Cited by 77Open Access

, has been synthesized via solvothermal reaction of thorium nitrate and 2,6-naphtalendicarboxilyc acid. This compound shows a new structural arrangement with an interesting topology and an excellent thermal resistance, as the framework is stable in air up to 450 °C. Most notably, this MOF, combining the radioactivity of its metal center and the scintillation property of the ligand, has been proven capable of spontaneous photon emission.