The stacking interactions between FH--N hydrogen-bonded foldamers 1-3, bis-foldamer 4, and tris-foldamer 5 and C(60) and C(70) are described. Compound 4 contains two folded units, which are connected by an isophthalamide linker, whereas 5 has a C(3)-symmetrical discotic structure, in which three folded units are connected by a benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxamide unit. UV/Vis, fluorescence, and NMR experiments have revealed that the foldamers or folded units strongly stack with fullerenes in chloroform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith an increasing number of folding and helical structures available, chemists have begun to pay greater attention to the functions of this family of structurally unique oligomers. Hydrogen-bonding-mediated aromatic oligoamide foldamers have the features of good structural predictability, synthetic facility, and structural modification, which make them very promising as scaffolds or platforms for supramolecular chemistry. Recent advances in the applications of this class of shape-persistent oligomers in the promoted synthesis of macrocycles, design of new nonring receptors, supramolecular self-assembly, molecular encapsulation, and reaction acceleration, are highlighted in this Focus Review.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF[reaction: see text] Three chiral aromatic hydrazide foldamers have been designed and synthesized, in which two R- or S-proline units were incorporated at the terminals of their backbones. The 1H NMR, circular dichroism (CD), and fluorescent experiments and molecular dynamics simulations revealed that the foldamers adopted a chiral helical conformation and complexed alkylated glucoses in chloroform with a good diastereomeric selectivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour intramolecular hydrogen bonding-driven aromatic amide foldamers 2-5 have been designed and synthesized in which a 2-methoxy-3-nitrobenzamide unit was incorporated at the end of the backbone. Kinetic studies in dioxane-water (4:1, v/v) at 60-90 degrees C have revealed that the folded backbone of the oligomers was, like the rigidified spherand, able to complex Li+, Na+, and K+ and, consequently, accelerated the hydrolysis of the nitro-appended anisole unit of the foldamers. Generally, longer foldamers displayed an increased accelerating effect, and LiOH displayed the highest reactivity probably due to the most efficient complexation by the folded oligomers.
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