Abstract

AbstractA chiral metal–organic cage (MOC) was extended and fixed into a porous framework using a post‐assembly modification strategy, which made it easier to study the host–guest chemistry of the solid‐state MOC using a single‐crystal diffraction technique. Anionic Ti4L6 (L=embonate) cage can be used as a 4‐connecting crystal engineering tecton, and its optical resolution was achieved, thus homochiral ΔΔΔΔ‐ and ΛΛΛΛ‐[Ti4L6] cages were obtained. Accordingly, a pair of homochiral cage‐based microporous frameworks (PTC‐236(Δ) and PTC‐236(Λ)) were easily prepared by a post‐assembly reaction. PTC‐236 has rich recognition sites provided by the Ti4L6 moieties, chiral channels and high framework stability, affording a single‐crystal‐to‐single‐crystal transformation for guest structure analyses. Thus it was successfully utilized for the recognition and separation of isomeric molecules. This study provides a new approach for the orderly combination of well‐defined MOCs into functional porous frameworks.

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