Abstract

AbstractCrystalline porous organic polymers (CPPs) or covalent organic frameworks (COFs), are composed by light elements linked by covalent bonds. Despite the remarkable progress attained, there are still bottlenecks limiting further development, some of them related to the presence of defects during their synthesis as well as in‐depth understanding of structure of active centers and/or details of the reaction mechanism. Indeed, very often the proposed structures are far from reality because defects and disorders have not been considered. The present review provides an illustrative overview of “defects and disorder in COFs”. These defects include those not only generated during the synthesis and manipulation of COFs, but also lack of crystallinity, stacking disorder and network vacancies. The review starts giving general remarks on organic COFs and their synthetic methods, followed by different methods to play and manage defects, how to minimize them or how to take advantage of them to gain new properties and applications. Selected characterization techniques to quantify defective structures and active sites in COFs are also presented. Finally, the challenges and future opportunities in the field have been summarized in the last section.

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