Abstract
Porous molecular materials are constructed from molecules that assemble in the solid-state such
that there are cavities or an interconnected pore network. It is challenging to control the assembly
of these systems, as the interactions between the molecules are generally weak, and subtle changes
in the molecular structure can lead to vastly different intermolecular interactions and subsequently
different crystal packing arrangements. Similarly, the use of different solvents for crystallisation,
or the introduction of solvent vapour, can result in different polymorphs and pore networks being
formed. It is difficult to uniquely describe the pore networks formed, and thus we analysed 1033
crystal structures of porous molecular systems to determine the underlying topology of their void
spaces and potential guest diffusion networks. Material-agnostic topology definitions are applied.
We use the underlying topological nets to examine whether it is possible to apply isoreticular design
principles to porous molecular materials. Overall, our automatic analysis of a large data set gives us
the opportunity to gain a general insight into the relationships between molecular topologies and the
topological nets of their pore network. We show that while porous molecular systems tend to pack
similarly to non-porous molecules, the topologies of their pore distributions resemble those of more
prominent porous materials, such as MOFs and COFs.
Supplementary materials
Title
Complete topology analysis of POC systems
Description
Compiled topological analysis referenced by CSD refcode
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Title
Supplementary information
Description
Description of database and additional figures
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