In 1976, the first attempted synthesis of the saddle-shaped molecule [8]circulene was reported. The next 37 years produced no advancement towards the construction of this complicated molecule. Remarkably, however, over the last six months a flurry of progress has been made with two groups reporting independent and strikingly different strategies for the synthesis of [8]circulene derivatives. Herein, we present a third synthetic method in which we target tetrabenzo[8]circulene. Our approach employs a Diels-Alder reaction and a palladium-catalyzed arylation reaction as the key steps. Despite calculations describing the instability of [8]circulene, coupled with the reported instability of synthesized derivatives of the parent molecule, the addition of four fused benzenoid rings around the periphery of the molecule provides a highly stable structure. This increased stability over the parent [8]circulene was predicted using Clar’s theory of aromatic sextets and is a result of the compound becoming fully benzenoid upon incorporation of these additional rings. The synthesized compound exhibits remarkable stability under ambient conditions – even at elevated temperatures – with no signs of decomposition over several months. The solid-state structure of this compound is significantly twisted compared to the calculated structure primarily as a result of crystal packing forces in the solid state. Despite this contortion from the lowest energy structure, a range of structural data is presented confirming the presence of localized aromaticity in this large polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon.
Particle-based MRI contrast agents have been the focus of recent studies, primarily due to the possibility of preparing multimodal particles capable of simultaneously targeting, imaging, and treating specific biological tissues in vivo. In addition, particle-based MRI contrast agents often have greater sensitivity than commercially available, soluble agents due to decreased molecular tumbling rates following surface immobilization, leading to increased relaxivities. Mesoporous silica particles are particularly attractive substrates due to their large internal surface areas. In this study, we immobilized a unique phosphonate-containing ligand onto mesoporous silica particles with a range of pore diameters, pore volumes, and surface areas, and Gd(III) ions were then chelated to the particles. Per-Gd(III) ionic relaxivities ranged from approximate 2 to 10 mM−1s−1 (37 °C, 60 MHz), compared to 3.0 – 3.5 mM−1 s−1 for commercial agents. The large surface areas allowed many Gd(III) ions to be chelated, leading to per-particle relaxivities of 3.3 × 107 mM−1s−1, which is the largest value measured for a biologically-suitable particle.
Encapsulation of macrocyclic europium(III) chelates by discrete, monodisperse SiO 2 nanoparticles (NPs) has been carried out, and the resulting significant enhancement of metal-derived luminescence has been studied to rationalize this dramatic effect. The tetraiminodiphenolate motif chosen for this study is easily synthesized and incorporated into the NP matrix under ambient conditions. The free complex exhibits primarily weak ligand-derived emission at room temperature, typical for these compounds, and displays intense metal-centered luminescence from the europium only when cooled to 77 K. Upon encapsulation by the NPs, however, europium-derived luminescence is visibly "turned on" at room temperature, yielding strong emission peaks characteristic of europium(III) with a corresponding enhancement factor of 6 × 10 6 . The similar ligand singlet and triplet excited-state energies determined for the free complex (20820 and 17670 cm −1 , respectively) versus the encapsulated complex (20620 and 17730 cm −1 ) indicate that encapsulation does not affect the energy levels of the ligand appreciably. Instead, a detailed analysis of the metal-centered emission and ligand singlet and triplet emission bands for the free and encapsulated complexes reveals that the enhanced metal emission is due to the rigid environment afforded by the silica NP matrix affecting vibrationally mediated energy transfer. Further, the metal-centered emission lifetimes in methanol versus deuterated methanol indicate a decrease in the number of coordinated solvent molecules upon encapsulation, changing from an average of 3.3 to 2.1 bound methanol molecules and reducing the known quenching effect on europiumcentered luminescence due to nearby OH vibrations.
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