Greater control is achieved over the chain growth and properties of dynamic materials
Conspectus In order to fabricate efficient molecular photonic devices, it has been a long-held aspiration for chemists to understand and mimic natural light-harvesting complexes where a rapid and efficient transfer of excitation energy between chlorophyll pigments is observed. Synthetic porphyrins are attractive building blocks in this regard because of their rigid and planar geometry, high thermal and electronic stability, high molar extinction, small and tunable band gap, and tweakable optical as well as redox behavior. Owing to these fascinating properties, various types of porphyrin-based architectures have been reported utilizing both covalent and noncovalent approaches. However, it still remains a challenge to construct chemically robust, well-defined three-dimensional porphyrin cages which can be easily synthesized and yet suitable for useful applications both in solution as well as in solid state. Working on this idea, we recently synthesized box-shaped organic cages, which we called porphyrin boxes, by making use of dynamic covalent chemistry of imine condensation reaction between 4-connecting, square-shaped, tetraformylporphyrin and 3-connecting, triangular-shaped, triamine molecules. Various presynthetic, as well as postsynthetic modifications, can be carried out on porphyrin boxes including a variation of the alkyl chain length in their 3-connecting subunit, chemical functionalization, and metalation of the porphyrin core. This can remarkably tune their inherent properties, e.g., solubility, window size, volume, and polarity of the internal void. The porphyrin boxes can therefore be considered as a significant addition to the family of multiporphyrin-based architectures, and because of their chemical stability and shape persistency, the applications of porphyrin boxes expand beyond the photophysical properties of an artificial light-harvesting complex. Consequently, they have been exploited as porous organic cages, where their gas adsorption properties have been investigated. By incorporating them in a lipid bilayer membrane, an iodide selective synthetic ion channel has also been demonstrated. Further, we have explored electrocatalytic reduction of carbon dioxide using Fe(III) metalated porphyrin boxes. Additionally, the precise size and ease of metalation of porphyrin boxes allowed us to utilize them as premade building blocks for creating coordination-based hierarchical superstructures. Considering these developments, it may be worth combining the photophysical properties of porphyrin with the shape-persistent porous nature of porphyrin boxes to explore other novel applications. This Account summarizes our recent work on porphyrin boxes, starting with their design, structural features, and applications in different fields. We also try to provide scientific insight into the future opportunities that these amazing boxes have in store for exploring the still uncharted challenging domains in the field of supramolecular chemistry in a confined space.
No abstract
Protection of currency and valuable documents from counterfeit continues to be a challenge. While there are many embedded security features available for document safety, they are not immune to forgery. Fluorescence is a sensitive property, which responds to external stimuli such as solvent polarity, temperature or mechanical stress, however practical use in security applications is hampered due to several reasons. Therefore, a simple and specific stimuli responsive security feature that is difficult to duplicate is of great demand. Herein we report the design of a fluorescent molecular assembly on which water behaves as a self-erasable security marker for checking the authenticity of documents at point of care. The underlying principle involves the disciplined self-assembly of a tailor-made fluorescent molecule, which initially form a weak blue fluorescence (λem = 425 nm, Φf = 0.13) and changes to cyan emission (λem = 488 nm,Φf = 0.18) in contact with water due to a reversible molecular slipping motion. This simple chemical tool, based on the principles of molecular self-assembly and fluorescence modulation, allows creation of security labels and optically masked barcodes for multiple documents authentication.
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.