Abstract

The bottom-up assembly of periodically ordered structures provides a scalable way for producing metastructured materials with exotic optical and mechanical properties. However, direct self-assembly of small molecules into such metastructures beyond the nanoscale remains an unresolved issue. Here we demonstrate that metastructured assemblies of two-dimensional (2D) polymers, specifically 2D covalent organic frameworks (COFs), can be directly synthesized in solution. We applied 2D COF monomer polycondensation to prepare flower-shaped particles consisting of highly crystalline "petals" with sizes larger than 20 μm. The petal comprises periodically arranged COF nanoflake units with tunable lengths of 490-850 nm, thicknesses about 20 nm, interflake spacing around 14 nm, and Hermans orientation factors up to 0.998. Such a metastructure is mechanically robust and remains almost intact even after full pyrolysis at 900 °C. It also demonstrates unique birefringence and polarization-dependent resonances under visible-near-infrared light not observed in its constituents, 2D COF polycrystals, and with well-defined nanopores of 1.8 nm and the high surface area of 1576 m2/g. Such metastructured particles with nanopores are well-suited as novel particulate optical devices for collecting and storing information about their surroundings that can be easily read out by polarization imaging with high sensitivity, as demonstrated by their explosive detection and anticounterfeiting applications. Self-assembly of 2D polymers into metastructures may become an important method for developing functional materials with unprecedented properties and extensive applications.

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