Postsynthetic linker exchange (PLE) has emerged as an emerging synthetic strategy for constructing high-quality covalent organic frameworks (COFs) from preassembled entities such as linear polymers, amorphous networks, COFs, and porous organic cages by using the principles of dynamic covalent chemistry. The PLE strategy has recently been extended at the liquid-liquid interface to fabricate highly crystalline two-dimensional (2D)-COF membranes at a faster time scale (24 h). Examining the early stages of the interfacial PLE dynamics becomes essential to understanding the expedited COF growth process. In this regard, pendant drop tensiometry has been employed to probe the initial reaction dynamics of the imine cage-to-COF transformation through dynamic interfacial tension (IFT) measurements. The contrasting trends in IFT profiles between PLE-mediated (from cage) and direct COF synthesis (from parent monomers) are in qualitative agreement with the kinetics of bulk-scale interfacial polymerizations. Further, the distinct early-stage interfacial behaviors between the diverse synthetic routes have been experimentally demonstrated using tensiometry, optical microscopy, electron microscopy, and powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) analysis. The pivotal role of in situ generated imine intermediates (ImIs) and the phenomenon of spontaneous emulsification toward accelerated interfacial COF growth process was delineated. The current study on deploying the pendant drop tensiometric technique to examine early-stage interfacial polymerization dynamics opens up a gripping avenue for mechanistic exploration in PLE-based COF synthesis. The generality of the developed methodology to study the initial COF growth kinetics was extended to a new interfacial PLE-mediated cage-to-COF transformation.
Read full abstract