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Dive into the research topics where Tom Hasell is active.

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Featured researches published by Tom Hasell.


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.


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.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

Metal–Organic Conjugated Microporous Polymers

Jia-Xing Jiang; Chao Wang; Andrea Laybourn; Tom Hasell; Rob Clowes; Yaroslav Z. Khimyak; Jianliang Xiao; Simon J. Higgins; Dave J. Adams; Andrew I. Cooper

Zwei vielseitige Strategien fur die Herstellung von Metall-organischen konjugierten mikroporosen Polymeren (MO-CMPs) mit Metallen wie Rhenium, Rhodium und Iridium werden beschrieben (siehe Beispiel). Diese Materialien vereinen in sich zwei Merkmale: eine ausgedehnte, unterbrechungsfreie elektronische Konjugation und das Vorhandensein katalytisch aktiver Metallzentren


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.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Nanoporous Organic Polymer/Cage Composite Membranes

Alexandra F. Bushell; Peter M. Budd; Martin P. Attfield; James T. A. Jones; Tom Hasell; Andrew I. Cooper; Paola Bernardo; Fabio Bazzarelli; Gabriele Clarizia; J.C. Jansen

Organic?organic composite membranes are prepared by in?situ crystallization of cage molecules in a polymer of intrinsic microporosity. This allows a direct one-step route to mixed-matrix membranes, starting with a homogeneous molecular solution. Extremely high gas permeabilities are achieved, even after ageing for more than a year, coupled with good selectivity for applications such as CO2 recovery.


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.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

On–Off Porosity Switching in a Molecular Organic Solid

James T. A. Jones; Daniel Holden; Tamoghna Mitra; Tom Hasell; Dave J. Adams; Kim E. Jelfs; Abbie Trewin; David J. Willock; Graeme M. Day; John Bacsa; Alexander Steiner; Andrew I. Cooper

Pulling the old switcheroo: Microporosity can be switched “on” and “off” in a crystalline molecular organic solid composed of cage molecules (see scheme). The switch is facilitated by conformational flexibility in the soft organic crystal state.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Molecular Doping of Porous Organic Cages

Tom Hasell; Marc Schmidtmann; Andrew I. Cooper

Porous organic cages can act as hosts for the three-dimensional alignment of guests such as halogens and organometallics. Porous single crystals are doped by vapor sublimation to produce diamondoid arrangements of guests such as I(5)(-) and OsO(4), leading to marked conductivity enhancement in the case of I(5)(-).


Nature Communications | 2011

Porous organic molecular solids by dynamic covalent scrambling

Shan Jiang; James T. A. Jones; Tom Hasell; Charlotte E. Blythe; Dave J. Adams; Abbie Trewin; Andrew I. Cooper

The main strategy for constructing porous solids from discrete organic molecules is crystal engineering, which involves forming regular crystalline arrays. Here, we present a chemical approach for desymmetrizing organic cages by dynamic covalent scrambling reactions. This leads to molecules with a distribution of shapes which cannot pack effectively and, hence, do not crystallize, creating porosity in the amorphous solid. The porous properties can be fine tuned by varying the ratio of reagents in the scrambling reaction, and this allows the preparation of materials with high gas selectivities. The molecular engineering of porous amorphous solids complements crystal engineering strategies and may have advantages in some applications, for example, in the compatibilization of functionalities that do not readily cocrystallize.


Angewandte Chemie | 2012

Soluble Conjugated Microporous Polymers

Ge Cheng; Tom Hasell; Abbie Trewin; Dave J. Adams; Andrew I. Cooper

Soluble and porous: Soluble conjugated microporous polymers (SCMPs) can be prepared by synthesizing discrete hyperbranched molecules. The materials can be cast from solution as thin films (see picture), suggesting a range of processing options that are not available for insoluble CMP networks. Soluble, conjugated dendrimers are porous and give insight into the structural origin of microporosity.

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Kim E. Jelfs

Imperial College London

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Rob Clowes

University of Liverpool

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