More than a quarter of a century after the first metal template synthesis of a [2]catenane in Strasbourg, there now exists a plethora of strategies available for the construction of mechanically bonded and entwined molecular level structures. Catenanes, rotaxanes, knots and Borromean rings have all been successfully accessed by methods in which metal ions play a pivotal role. Originally metal ions were used solely for their coordination chemistry; acting either to gather and position the building blocks such that subsequent reactions generated the interlocked products or by being an integral part of the rings or "stoppers" of the interlocked assembly. Recently the role of the metal has evolved to encompass catalysis: the metal ions not only organize the building blocks in an entwined or threaded arrangement but also actively promote the reaction that covalently captures the interlocked structure. This Review outlines the diverse strategies that currently exist for forming mechanically bonded molecular structures with metal ions and details the tactics that the chemist can utilize for creating cross-over points, maximizing the yield of interlocked over non-interlocked products, and the reactions-of-choice for the covalent capture of threaded and entwined intermediates.
Knots are being discovered with increasing frequency in both biological and synthetic macromolecules and have been fundamental topological targets for chemical synthesis for the past two decades. Here, we report on the synthesis of the most complex non-DNA molecular knot prepared to date: the self-assembly of five bis-aldehyde and five bis-amine building blocks about five metal cations and one chloride anion to form a 160-atom-loop molecular pentafoil knot (five crossing points). The structure and topology of the knot is established by NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry and X-ray crystallography, revealing a symmetrical closed-loop double helicate with the chloride anion held at the centre of the pentafoil knot by ten CH ... Cl -hydrogen bonds. The one-pot self-assembly reaction features an exceptional number of different design elements-some well precedented and others less well known within the context of directing the formation of (supra)molecular species. We anticipate that the strategies and tactics used here can be applied to the rational synthesis of other higher-order interlocked molecular architectures.K nots are important structural features in DNA 1 , are found in some proteins [2][3][4][5] and are thought to play a significant role in the physical properties of both natural and synthetic polymers 6,7 . Although billions of prime knots are known to mathematics 8 , to date the only ones to have succumbed to chemical synthesis using building blocks other than DNA are the topologically trivial unknot (that is, a simple closed loop without any crossing points) and the next simplest knot (featuring three crossing points), the trefoil knot 9,10 . A pentafoil knot-also known as a cinquefoil knot or Solomon's seal knot (the 5 1 knot in Alexander-Briggs notation 11 )-is a torus knot 12 with five crossing points, is inherently chiral, and is the fourth prime knot (following the unknot, trefoil knot and figure-of-eight knot) in terms of number of crossing points and complexity 8,11,12 .Sauvage reported the first molecular knot synthesis 13 , using a linear metal helicate 14 to generate the three crossing points required for a trefoil knot. Although other syntheses of trefoil knots have been reported [15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22] (as have composites of trefoil knots 23 and other molecular topologies such as catenanes [24][25][26][27][28] and Borromean links 29 ), higher-order molecular knots remain elusive. Here, we report on the synthesis of a molecular pentafoil knot that combines the use of metal helicates to create crossover points 30 , anion template assembly to form a cyclic array of the correct size [31][32][33] , and the joining of the metal complexes by reversible imine bond formation 34-37 aided by the gauche effect 38 to make the continuous 160-atom-long covalent backbone of the most complex non-DNA molecular knot prepared to date.So far, attempts to make molecular knots with more than three crossing points by extending the linear helicate strategy of Sauvage to ligands with more coordination sites...
We report photochromic donor-acceptor Stenhouse adducts (DASAs) capable of fully reversible photoisomerization with visible light in organic solvents including chloroform, acetonitrile and benzene. The rates of photoisomerization and thermal reversion can be tuned by altering the electronics of the donor adduct. X-Ray crystallography and photo-NMR experiments unambiguously establish molecular structures.
This tutorial review outlines the different template strategies that chemists have employed to synthesise knotted molecular topologies. Metal ion coordination, hydrogen bonding and aromatic donor-acceptor interactions have all been used to direct the formation of well-defined crossing points for molecular strands. Advances in the methods used to covalently capture the interwoven structures are highlighted, including the active metal template strategy in which metal ions both organise crossing points and catalyse the bond forming reactions that close the loop to form the topologically complex product. Although most non-trivial knots prepared to date from small-molecule building blocks have been trefoil knots, the first pentafoil knot was recently synthesised. Possible future directions and strategies in this rapidly evolving area of chemistry are discussed.
Surprisingly small structural changes in Donor–Acceptor Stenhouse Adducts (DASAs) result in predictable, robust and effective photochromic switches.
Molecular photoswitches capable of generating precise pH changes will allow pH-dependent processes to be controlled remotely and noninvasively with light. We introduce a series of new merocyanine photoswitches, which deliver reversible bulk pH changes up to 3.2 pH units (pH 6.5 to pH 3.3) upon irradiation with 450 nm light, displaying tunable and predictable timescales for thermal recovery. We present models to show that the key parameters for optimizing the bulk pH changes are measurable: the solubility of the photoswitch, the acidity of the merocyanine form, the thermal equilibrium position between the spiropyran and the merocyanine isomers, and the increased acidity under visible light irradiation. Using ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy, we determined the quantum yields for the ringclosing reaction and found that the lifetimes of the transient cis-merocyanine isomers ranged from 30 to 550 ns. Quantum yields did not appear to be a limitation for bulk pH switching. The models we present use experimentally determined parameters and are, in principle, able to predict the change in pH obtained for any related merocyanine photoacid.
A molecular pentafoil knot and doubly and triply entwined [2]catenanes based on circular Fe(II) double helicate scaffolds bind halide anions in their central cavities through electrostatic and CH···X(-) hydrogen-bonding interactions. The binding is up to (3.6 ± 0.2) × 10(10) M(-1) in acetonitrile (for pentafoil knot [2·Cl](PF6)9), making these topologically complex host molecules some of the strongest synthetic noncovalent binders of halide anions measured to date, comparable in chloride ion affinity to silver salts.
Donor-acceptor Stenhouse adducts (DASAs) are a new class of photoswitching molecules with excellent fatigue resistance and synthetic tunability. Here, tandem ion mobility mass spectrometry coupled with laser excitation is used to characterize the photocyclization reaction of isolated, charge-tagged DASA molecules over the 450-580 nm range. The experimental maximum response at 530 nm agrees with multireference perturbation theory calculations for the S ← S transition maximum at 533 nm. Photocyclization in the gas phase involves absorption of at least two photons; the first photon induces Z-E isomerization from the linear isomer to metastable intermediate isomers, while the second photon drives another E-Z isomerization and 4π-electrocyclization reaction. Cyclization is thermally reversible in the gas phase with collisional excitation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.