Conjugated microporous polymers: design, synthesis and application

Yanhong Xu(Institute for Molecular Science), Shangbin Jin(National Institutes of Natural Sciences), Hong Xu(National Institutes of Natural Sciences), Atsushi Nagai(Institute for Molecular Science), Donglin Jiang(Institute for Molecular Science)
Chemical Society Reviews
January 1, 2013
Cited by 1,675

Abstract

Conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs) are a class of organic porous polymers that combine π-conjugated skeletons with permanent nanopores, in sharp contrast to other porous materials that are not π-conjugated and with conventional conjugated polymers that are nonporous. As an emerging material platform, CMPs offer a high flexibility for the molecular design of conjugated skeletons and nanopores. Various chemical reactions, building blocks and synthetic methods have been developed and a broad variety of CMPs with different structures and specific properties have been synthesized, driving the rapid growth of the field. CMPs are unique in that they allow the complementary utilization of π-conjugated skeletons and nanopores for functional exploration; they have shown great potential for challenging energy and environmental issues, as exemplified by their excellent performance in gas adsorption, heterogeneous catalysis, light emitting, light harvesting and electrical energy storage. This review describes the molecular design principles of CMPs, advancements in synthetic and structural studies and the frontiers of functional exploration and potential applications.


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