Abstract

Integrating multiple functions into one host for improved catalytic performance is challenging and promising for both catalysis and material science. Herein a new acid–base bifunctional periodic mesoporous titanium phosphonate hybrid material is synthesized by a facile one-pot hydrothermal method, using alendronate sodium trihydrate as a coupling molecule. The new material possesses highly periodic mesopores with a large specific surface area of 540 m2 g–1 and pore volume of 0.43 cm3 g–1, favoring the smooth mass transport of reactants and products during the catalytic reaction. It also has an organic–inorganic hybrid framework with homogeneously incorporated phosphonate groups, in which a large number of accessible acidic P–OH and basic −NH2 sites can, respectively, activate aziridine and CO2, synergistically leading to the high conversion (>99%), yield (98%), and regioselectivity (98:2) for the CO2 cycloaddition reaction. The catalytic activity is better than that of the scarcely reported heterogeneous ...

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