Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Samantha Y. Chong is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Samantha Y. Chong.


Nature Materials | 2009

Porous organic cages

Tomokazu Tozawa; James T. A. Jones; Shashikala I. Swamy; Shan Jiang; Dave J. Adams; Stephen Shakespeare; Rob Clowes; Darren Bradshaw; Tom Hasell; Samantha Y. Chong; C.C. Tang; Stephen P. Thompson; Julia E. Parker; Abbie Trewin; John Bacsa; Alexandra M. Z. Slawin; Alexander Steiner; Andrew I. Cooper

Porous materials are important in a wide range of applications including molecular separations and catalysis. We demonstrate that covalently bonded organic cages can assemble into crystalline microporous materials. The porosity is prefabricated and intrinsic to the molecular cage structure, as opposed to being formed by non-covalent self-assembly of non-porous sub-units. The three-dimensional connectivity between the cage windows is controlled by varying the chemical functionality such that either non-porous or permanently porous assemblies can be produced. Surface areas and gas uptakes for the latter exceed comparable molecular solids. One of the cages can be converted by recrystallization to produce either porous or non-porous polymorphs with apparent Brunauer-Emmett-Teller surface areas of 550 and 23 m2 g(-1), respectively. These results suggest design principles for responsive porous organic solids and for the modular construction of extended materials from prefabricated molecular pores.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

A Guest-Responsive Fluorescent 3D Microporous Metal−Organic Framework Derived from a Long-Lifetime Pyrene Core

Kyriakos C. Stylianou; Romain Heck; Samantha Y. Chong; John Bacsa; James T. A. Jones; Yaroslav Z. Khimyak; Darren Bradshaw; Matthew J. Rosseinsky

The carboxylate ligand 1,3,6,8-tetrakis(p-benzoic acid)pyrene (TBAPy)-based on the strongly fluorescent long-lifetime pyrene core-affords a permanently microporous fluorescent metal-organic framework, [In(2)(OH)(2)(TBAPy)].(guests) (1), displaying 54% total accessible volume and excellent thermal stability. Fluorescence studies reveal that both 1 and TBAPy display strong emission bands at 471 and 529 nm, respectively, upon excitation at 390 nm, with framework coordination of the TBAPy ligands significantly increasing the emission lifetime from 0.089 to 0.110 ms. Upon desolvation, the emission band for the framework is shifted to lower energy: however, upon re-exposure to DMF the as-made material is regenerated with reversible fluorescence behavior. Together with the lifetime, the emission intensity is strongly enhanced by spatial separation of the optically active ligand molecules within the MOF structure and is found to be dependent on the amount and chemical nature of the guest species in the pores. The quantum yield of the material is found to be 6.7% and, coupled with the fluorescence lifetime on the millisecond time scale, begins to approach the values observed for Eu(III)-cryptate-derived commercial sensors.


Nature | 2011

Modular and predictable assembly of porous organic molecular crystals

James T. A. Jones; Tom Hasell; Xiaofeng Wu; John Bacsa; Kim E. Jelfs; Marc Schmidtmann; Samantha Y. Chong; Dave J. Adams; Abbie Trewin; Florian Schiffman; Furio Corà; Ben Slater; Alexander Steiner; Graeme M. Day; Andrew I. Cooper

Nanoporous molecular frameworks are important in applications such as separation, storage and catalysis. Empirical rules exist for their assembly but it is still challenging to place and segregate functionality in three-dimensional porous solids in a predictable way. Indeed, recent studies of mixed crystalline frameworks suggest a preference for the statistical distribution of functionalities throughout the pores rather than, for example, the functional group localization found in the reactive sites of enzymes. This is a potential limitation for ‘one-pot’ chemical syntheses of porous frameworks from simple starting materials. An alternative strategy is to prepare porous solids from synthetically preorganized molecular pores. In principle, functional organic pore modules could be covalently prefabricated and then assembled to produce materials with specific properties. However, this vision of mix-and-match assembly is far from being realized, not least because of the challenge in reliably predicting three-dimensional structures for molecular crystals, which lack the strong directional bonding found in networks. Here we show that highly porous crystalline solids can be produced by mixing different organic cage modules that self-assemble by means of chiral recognition. The structures of the resulting materials can be predicted computationally, allowing in silico materials design strategies. The constituent pore modules are synthesized in high yields on gram scales in a one-step reaction. Assembly of the porous co-crystals is as simple as combining the modules in solution and removing the solvent. In some cases, the chiral recognition between modules can be exploited to produce porous organic nanoparticles. We show that the method is valid for four different cage modules and can in principle be generalized in a computationally predictable manner based on a lock-and-key assembly between modules.


Science | 2010

An Adaptable Peptide-Based Porous Material

Jeremy Rabone; Y.-F. Yue; Samantha Y. Chong; Kyriakos C. Stylianou; John Bacsa; Darren Bradshaw; George R. Darling; Neil G. Berry; Yaroslav Z. Khimyak; Alexey Y. Ganin; Paul V. Wiper; John B. Claridge; Matthew J. Rosseinsky

Swelling Pores Porosity is a key parameter when selecting materials for catalysts, chemical separations, gas storage, host-guest interactions, and related chemical processes. In most cases the porosity of a material is fixed. Rabone et al. (p. 1053; see the Perspective by Wright) have described a molecular material in which the size of the pores changed during the sorption process. The porosity increased because a dipeptide linker between metal centers reoriented during uptake of some gases, thus improving the capacity of the material to adsorb. Conformational changes in a porous material during the sorption of small molecules lead to a dynamic increase in porosity. Porous materials find widespread application in storage, separation, and catalytic technologies. We report a crystalline porous solid with adaptable porosity, in which a simple dipeptide linker is arranged in a regular array by coordination to metal centers. Experiments reinforced by molecular dynamics simulations showed that low-energy torsions and displacements of the peptides enabled the available pore volume to evolve smoothly from zero as the guest loading increased. The observed cooperative feedback in sorption isotherms resembled the response of proteins undergoing conformational selection, suggesting an energy landscape similar to that required for protein folding. The flexible peptide linker was shown to play the pivotal role in changing the pore conformation.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Triazine‐Based Graphitic Carbon Nitride: a Two‐Dimensional Semiconductor

Gerardo Algara-Siller; Nikolai Severin; Samantha Y. Chong; Torbjörn Björkman; Robert G. Palgrave; Andrea Laybourn; Markus Antonietti; Yaroslav Z. Khimyak; Arkady V. Krasheninnikov; Juergen P. Rabe; Ute Kaiser; Andrew I. Cooper; Arne Thomas; Michael J. Bojdys

Graphitic carbon nitride has been predicted to be structurally analogous to carbon-only graphite, yet with an inherent bandgap. We have grown, for the first time, macroscopically large crystalline thin films of triazine-based, graphitic carbon nitride (TGCN) using an ionothermal, interfacial reaction starting with the abundant monomer dicyandiamide. The films consist of stacked, two-dimensional (2D) crystals between a few and several hundreds of atomic layers in thickness. Scanning force and transmission electron microscopy show long-range, in-plane order, while optical spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and density functional theory calculations corroborate a direct bandgap between 1.6 and 2.0 eV. Thus TGCN is of interest for electronic devices, such as field-effect transistors and light-emitting diodes.


Nature Materials | 2014

Separation of rare gases and chiral molecules by selective binding in porous organic cages

Linjiang Chen; Paul S. Reiss; Samantha Y. Chong; Daniel Holden; Kim E. Jelfs; Tom Hasell; Marc A. Little; Adam Kewley; Michael E. Briggs; Andrew Stephenson; K. Mark Thomas; Jayne A. Armstrong; Jon G. Bell; José Busto; Raymond Noel; Jian Liu; Denis M. Strachan; Praveen K. Thallapally; Andrew I. Cooper

The separation of molecules with similar size and shape is an important technological challenge. For example, rare gases can pose either an economic opportunity or an environmental hazard and there is a need to separate these spherical molecules selectively at low concentrations in air. Likewise, chiral molecules are important building blocks for pharmaceuticals, but chiral enantiomers, by definition, have identical size and shape, and their separation can be challenging. Here we show that a porous organic cage molecule has unprecedented performance in the solid state for the separation of rare gases, such as krypton and xenon. The selectivity arises from a precise size match between the rare gas and the organic cage cavity, as predicted by molecular simulations. Breakthrough experiments demonstrate real practical potential for the separation of krypton, xenon and radon from air at concentrations of only a few parts per million. We also demonstrate selective binding of chiral organic molecules such as 1-phenylethanol, suggesting applications in enantioselective separation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Swellable, Water- and Acid-Tolerant Polymer Sponges for Chemoselective Carbon Dioxide Capture

Robert T. Woodward; Lee A. Stevens; Robert Dawson; Meera Vijayaraghavan; Tom Hasell; Ian P. Silverwood; Andrew V. Ewing; Thanchanok Ratvijitvech; Jason D. Exley; Samantha Y. Chong; Frédéric Blanc; Dave J. Adams; Sergei G. Kazarian; Colin E. Snape; Trevor C. Drage; Andrew I. Cooper

To impact carbon emissions, new materials for carbon capture must be inexpensive, robust, and able to adsorb CO2 specifically from a mixture of other gases. In particular, materials must be tolerant to the water vapor and to the acidic impurities that are present in gas streams produced by using fossil fuels to generate electricity. We show that a porous organic polymer has excellent CO2 capacity and high CO2 selectivity under conditions relevant to precombustion CO2 capture. Unlike polar adsorbents, such as zeolite 13x and the metal-organic framework, HKUST-1, the CO2 adsorption capacity for the hydrophobic polymer is hardly affected by the adsorption of water vapor. The polymer is even stable to boiling in concentrated acid for extended periods, a property that is matched by few microporous adsorbents. The polymer adsorbs CO2 in a different way from rigid materials by physical swelling, much as a sponge adsorbs water. This gives rise to a higher CO2 capacities and much better CO2 selectivity than for other water-tolerant, nonswellable frameworks, such as activated carbon and ZIF-8. The polymer has superior function as a selective gas adsorbent, even though its constituent monomers are very simple organic feedstocks, as would be required for materials preparation on the large industrial scales required for carbon capture.


Chemical Communications | 2011

CO2 selectivity of a 1D microporous adenine-based metal–organic framework synthesised in water

Kyriakos C. Stylianou; John E. Warren; Samantha Y. Chong; Jeremy Rabone; John Bacsa; Darren Bradshaw; Matthew J. Rosseinsky

The coordination of adenine to Ni(2+) forms a dimer unit which can be linked by 3,5-pyrazoledicarboxylic acid into chains which assemble under hydrothermal conditions via hydrogen bonding into a robust porous network. The material displays selectivity for CO(2) over CH(4) and an isosteric heat which increases with guest loading.


Nature | 2017

Functional materials discovery using energy–structure–function maps

Angeles Pulido; Linjiang Chen; Tomasz Kaczorowski; Daniel Holden; Marc A. Little; Samantha Y. Chong; Benjamin J. Slater; David P. McMahon; Baltasar Bonillo; Chloe J. Stackhouse; Andrew Stephenson; Christopher M. Kane; Rob Clowes; Tom Hasell; Andrew I. Cooper; Graeme M. Day

Molecular crystals cannot be designed in the same manner as macroscopic objects, because they do not assemble according to simple, intuitive rules. Their structures result from the balance of many weak interactions, rather than from the strong and predictable bonding patterns found in metal–organic frameworks and covalent organic frameworks. Hence, design strategies that assume a topology or other structural blueprint will often fail. Here we combine computational crystal structure prediction and property prediction to build energy–structure–function maps that describe the possible structures and properties that are available to a candidate molecule. Using these maps, we identify a highly porous solid, which has the lowest density reported for a molecular crystal so far. Both the structure of the crystal and its physical properties, such as methane storage capacity and guest-molecule selectivity, are predicted using the molecular structure as the only input. More generally, energy–structure–function maps could be used to guide the experimental discovery of materials with any target function that can be calculated from predicted crystal structures, such as electronic structure or mechanical properties.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Porous Organic Cages for Sulfur Hexafluoride Separation

Tom Hasell; Marcin Miklitz; Andrew Stephenson; Marc A. Little; Samantha Y. Chong; Rob Clowes; Linjiang Chen; Daniel Holden; Gareth A. Tribello; Kim E. Jelfs; Andrew I. Cooper

A series of porous organic cages is examined for the selective adsorption of sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) over nitrogen. Despite lacking any metal sites, a porous cage, CC3, shows the highest SF6/N2 selectivity reported for any material at ambient temperature and pressure, which translates to real separations in a gas breakthrough column. The SF6 uptake of these materials is considerably higher than would be expected from the static pore structures. The location of SF6 within these materials is elucidated by X-ray crystallography, and it is shown that cooperative diffusion and structural rearrangements in these molecular crystals can rationalize their superior SF6/N2 selectivity.

Collaboration


Dive into the Samantha Y. Chong's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tom Hasell

University of Liverpool

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kim E. Jelfs

Imperial College London

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Graeme M. Day

University of Southampton

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rob Clowes

University of Liverpool

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge