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Abstract Doping gold nanoparticles within covalent organic frameworks (AuNPs@COFs) has garnered enormous momentum due to their unique properties and broad applications. Nevertheless, prevailing multi‐step synthesis is plagued with low time efficiency, eco‐unfriendliness, and tedious protocols. Herein, we introduce a rapid, sustainable, scalable, one‐step mechanochemical strategy for synthesizing up to four AuNPs‐doped COFs via steel ball milling within an hour under ambient conditions. This approach overcomes the synthetic barriers of conventional multi‐step solution‐based methods, such as extended reaction times (5 days), milligram scale, the use of toxic solvents, elevated temperatures, and reliance on external reducing agents. One exemplary AuNPs@COF (AuNPs@DMTP‐TPB) exhibits high crystallinity, porosity, small AuNP size, and uniform dispersion (5.4±0.6 nm), surpassing its counterpart synthesized via multi‐step solution‐based methods (6.4±1.1 nm). Notably, the gram‐scale synthesis of AuNPs@DMTP‐TPB can be successfully achieved. Control experiments suggest that thein situformation of AuNPs is attributed to the galvanic reduction of gold precursor by stainless steel apparatus. As a proof‐of‐concept catalytic application, AuNPs@DMTP‐TPB demonstrates remarkable catalytic activity and recyclability for the aqueous reduction of 4‐nitrophenol under ambient conditions. This study provides an environmentally benign and fast pathway to synthesize AuNPs@COFs via mechanochemistry for the first time, opening tremendous possibilities for heterogeneous catalysis and beyond.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 15, 2026
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Abstract The rapid and environmentally benign synthesis of metal‐immobilized covalent organic frameworks (metal/COFs) for heterogeneous catalysis is a pervasive challenge, as the mainstream synthesis is exceedingly time‐consuming (up to four days) and demands the use of hazardous solvents. Herein, we describe a sustainable and efficient one‐step sonochemical strategy for constructing diverse palladium (II)‐immobilized COFs (Pd(II)/COFs). By merging the sonochemistry‐assisted COF synthesis and in situ Pd (II) immobilization into a single step, this strategy enables the rapid formation of Pd(II)/COF hybrids within an hour under ambient conditions using water as the solvent. Notably, gram‐scale synthesis of Pd(II)/COFs is achievable. The resulting Pd(II)/COFs exhibit superb crystallinity and high surface area, leading to remarkable activity, excellent functionality tolerance, and high recyclability for the Suzuki–Miyaura cross‐coupling reaction of aryl bromides and arylboronic acids at room temperature. This one‐step sonochemical strategy effectively addresses the long‐lasting limitations of traditional multistep synthesis, paving a fast and sustainable avenue to diversified metal/COF hybrids for heterogeneous catalysis and potentially other applications.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
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Metal‐encapsulated covalent organic frameworks (metal/COFs) represent an emerging paradigm in heterogeneous catalysis. However, the time‐intensive (usually 4 or more days) and tedious multi‐step synthesis of metal/COFs remains a significant stumbling block for their broad application. To address this challenge, we introduce a facile microwave‐assistedin situmetal encapsulation strategy to cooperatively combine COF formation andin situpalladium(II) encapsulation in one step. With this unprecedented approach, we synthesize a diverse range of palladium(II)‐encapsulated COFs (termed Mw‐Pd/COF) in the air within just an hour. Notably, this strategy is scalable for large‐scale production (~0.5 g). Leveraging the high crystallinity, porosity, and structural stability, one representative Mw‐Pd/COF exhibits remarkable activity, functional group tolerance, and recyclability for the Suzuki‐Miyaura coupling reaction at room temperature, surpassing most previously reported Pd(II)/COF catalysts with respect to catalytic performance, preparation time, and synthetic ease. This microwave‐assistedin situmetal encapsulation strategy opens a facile and rapid avenue to construct metal/COF hybrids, which hold enormous potential in a multitude of applications including heterogeneous catalysis, sensing, and energy storage.more » « less
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Palladium-encapsulated covalent organic frameworks (Pd/COFs) have garnered enormous attention in heterogeneous catalysis. However, the dominant ex situ encapsulation synthesis is tedious (multistep), time-consuming (typically 4 days or more), and involves the use of noxious solvents. Here we develop a mechanochemical in situ encapsulation strategy that enables the one-step, timeefficient, and environmentally benign synthesis of Pd/COFs. By ball milling COF precursors along with palladium acetate (Pd(OAc)2) in one pot under air at room temperature, Pd/COF hybrids were readily synthesized within an hour, exhibiting high crystallinity, uniform Pd dispersion, and superb scalability up to gram scale. Moreover, this versatile strategy can be extended to the synthesis of three Pd/COFs. Remarkably, the resulting Pd/DMTP-TPB showcases extraordinary activity (96−99% yield in 1 h at room temperature) and broad substrate scope (>10 functionalized biaryls) for the Suzuki−Miyaura coupling reaction of aryl bromides and arylboronic acids. Furthermore, the heterogeneity of Pd/DMTP-TPB is verified by recycling and leaching tests. The mechanochemical in situ encapsulation strategy disclosed herein paves a facile, rapid, scalable, and environmentally benign avenue to access metal/COF catalysts for efficient heterogeneous catalysis.more » « less
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The use of covalent organic frameworks (COFs) for hazardous radioiodine capture has been highly sought after recently. However, the synthesis of high-performance COF adsorbents while circumventing the limitations of traditional solvothermal methods remains largely unexplored. Herein, we for the first time combine microwave-assisted synthesis and mixed-linker strategy to fabricate multivariate COF adsorbents (X% OMe-TFB-BD COFs, X% = 0, 33, 50, 67, and 100 mol%) with varying ratios of benzidine (BD) and 3,3′-dimethoxylbenzidine (BD-OMe) linkers in a rapid and facile manner. Adjusting the BD-OMe/BD mole ratios has led to distinct variations in density, crystallinity, porosity, morphology, and thermal/chemical stability of the resultant COFs, which empowered fine-tuning of the adsorption performance towards static iodine vapor. Remarkably, the 50 % OMe-TFB-BD COF exhibited an ultrahigh iodine adsorption capability of 8.2 g g−1, surpassing those of single-component COFs, mixed-linker COFs with other methoxy content, physically blended mixtures, and most existing COF adsorbents. Moreover, 50 % OMe-TFB-BD COF was recyclable seven times without obvious loss in its adsorption capacity. This work underscores the substantial potential of microwave-assisted mixed-linker strategy as a viable approach for developing multivariate COFs with shortened reaction times, precisely tailored pore environment, and tunable sorption properties, which are of considerable promise for environmental remediation and other niche applications.more » « less
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Catalysis is ubiquitous in ∼90% of chemical manufacturing processes and contributes up to 35% of global GDP. Hence, the development of advanced catalytic systems is of utmost importance for academia, industry, and government. Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are a rapidly emerging class of crystalline porous materials that precisely integrate organic monomer units into extended periodic networks, offering a propitious platform for heterogeneous catalysis due to salient structural merits of ultralow density, high crystallinity, permanent porosity, structural tunability, functional diversity, and synthetic versatility. The past decade has witnessed an upsurge of interest in COFs for heterogeneous catalysis and this trend is expected to continue. In this review, we briefly introduce COF chemistry concerning the design principles, growth mechanism, and cutting-edge advances in structural evolution, linkage chemistry, and facile synthesis. We then scrutinize four leading design strategies for COF catalysts, namely pristine COFs with catalytically active backbones, COFs as hosts for the inclusion of catalytic species, COF-based heterostructures, and COF-derived carbons for thermo-, photo-, and electrocatalysis. Next, we overview the most recent advances (mainly from 2020 to 2023) of COFs in heterogeneous catalysis, along with their fundamentals and advantages. Finally, we outline the current challenges and offer our perspectives on the future directions of COFs for heterogeneous catalysis.more » « less
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