“…For the last 20 years, due to their distinctive characteristics, such as a controllable pore size, permanent porosity, high chemical/mechanical stability, elevated active surface area, and facile functionalization, MOFs have been used as adsorbents [9,10], catalysts [11,12], supercapacitors [13], and drug delivery vehicles [14,15], especially for cancer therapy purposes [16,17]. Moreover, recently, sophisticated mixed-metal MOFs [18,19], as well as surface-modified MOFs [20], BioMOFs [21,22], and MOFs-derived materials [4,23], have attracted much interest in various fields, ranging from environmental engineering to biomedicine. The high number of publications related to MOFs, coupled with a sharp increase in the number of released papers each year, exhibits the desirability to use these valuable complexes (Figure 3).…”