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Tailoring Mesoporosity of Multi-Hydroxyls Hyper-Crosslinked Organic Polymers for Reinforced Ambient Chemical Fixation of CO2
Ambient condition-determined chemical CO2fixation affords great promise for remitting the pressure of CO2release. The construction of a microporous environment easily captures CO2molecules around the reactive sites of the catalyst to reinforce the reaction process. Herein, multi-hydroxyl-containing hyper-crosslinked organic polymers (HCPs-OH-n) are synthesized by the polymerization of 1,4-dichlorobenzyl (DCX) andm-trihydroxybenzene in the monosaccharide form in a Friedel–Crafts alkylation hypercrosslinking process (FCAHP). By tuning the DCX ratio in the FCAHP, the structural properties can be regulated to create a more microporous surface in the HCPs-OH-n; meanwhile, the formed multi-hydroxyl species in the microporous environment could induce the easy interaction between hydroxyls and epoxides by forming a hydrogen bond, which improves the activation of epoxides during the cycloaddition reaction to synthesize the cyclic carbonates at ambient conditions. The structural properties suggest that HCPs-OH-npossess a large surface area with appreciable microporous and mesoporous distribution. As expected, the HCPs-OH-3 bearing the most abundant mesoporosity affords the highest reactivity in the chemical CO2fixation to cyclic carbonates and is endowed with rational recoverability.