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Omar M. Yaghi

Researcher at University of California, Berkeley

Publications -  485
Citations -  191527

Omar M. Yaghi is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metal-organic framework & Adsorption. The author has an hindex of 165, co-authored 459 publications receiving 163918 citations. Previous affiliations of Omar M. Yaghi include Harvard University & Nalco Holding Company.

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Sequencing of metals in multivariate metal-organic frameworks

TL;DR: At atom-probe tomography can reveal sequences of metals for MOF-74 single crystals containing combinations of cobalt, cadmium, lead, and manganese ions, which could be random, short and long duplicates, and single metal insertions.
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Reticular Chemistry in All Dimensions.

TL;DR: For example, it is now widely accepted that reticular chemistry is the chemistry of linking molecular building blocks by strong bonds to make extended crystalline structures as exemplified by MOFs and COFs as mentioned in this paper.
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Reversible Interpenetration in a Metal–Organic Framework Triggered by Ligand Removal and Addition

TL;DR: In synthetic materials, specifically in metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), many advantageous properties also arise when MOFs are interpenetrated, such as selective guest capture, stepwise gas adsorption, enhanced framework robustness, photoluminescence control, and guest-responsive porosity.
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Mesoscopic Constructs of Ordered and Oriented Metal-Organic Frameworks on Plasmonic Silver Nanocrystals

TL;DR: Electron microscopy and grazing angle X-ray diffraction confirm the order and orientation of the MOF by virtue of the porphyrin units being perpendicular to the planes of the Ag, and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy is used to directly track the metalated and unmetalated linkers on a single-nanoparticle level.
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Three-Dimensional Phthalocyanine Metal-Catecholates for High Electrochemical Carbon Dioxide Reduction.

TL;DR: The synthesis of a new anionic 3D metal-catecholate framework, termed MOF-1992, is achieved by linking tetratopic cobalt phthalocyanin-2,3,9,10,16,17,23,24-octaol linkers with Fe3(-C2O2-)6(OH2)2 trimers into an extended framework of roc topology.