Smart windows are a promising solution to improve energy-saving efficiency and indoor comfort due to their potential functionalities including solar modulation, coloration, self-cleaning, self-power, and moisture scavenging. Recently, smart windows constructed by a supramolecular strategy have attracted increasing attention due to the inherent dynamic, reversible and adaptive properties of noncovalent interactions, which can endow the fabricated smart windows with desired fascinating functionalities. In this review, emerging supramolecular strategy-based materials are outlined and their applications for fabricating smart windows are summarized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunctional materials play a vital role in the fabrication of smart windows, which can provide a more comfortable indoor environment for humans to enjoy a better lifestyle. Traditional materials for smart windows tend to possess only a single functionality with the purpose of regulating the input of solar energy. However, different color tones also have great influences on human emotions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSupramolecular binary vesicles based on the host-guest complexation of water-soluble pillar[6]arene (WP6) and SAINT molecule have been successfully constructed, which showed pH-, Ca(2+)-, and thermal-responsiveness. These supramolecular vesicles can efficiently encapsulate model substrate calcein, which then can be efficiently released either by adjusting the solution pH to acidic condition due to the complete disruption of vesicular structure, or particularly, by adding a certain amount of Ca(2+) due to the Ca(2+)-induced vesicle fusion and accompanied by the structure disruption. More importantly, drug loading and releasing experiments demonstrate that an anticancer drug, DOX, can be successfully encapsulated by the supramolecular vesicles, and the resulting DOX-loaded vesicles exhibit efficient release of the encapsulated DOX with the pH adjustment or the introduction of Ca(2+).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe lanthanum(III) complexes tris(3,5-diphenylpyrazolato-κ(2)N,N')tris(tetrahydrofuran-κO)lanthanum(III) tetrahydrofuran monosolvate, [La(C(15)H(11)N(2))(3)(C(4)H(8)O)(3)]·C(4)H(8)O, (I), and tris(3,5-diphenyl-1,2,4-triazolato-κ(2)N(1),N(2))tris(tetrahydrofuran-κO)lanthanum(III), [La(C(14)H(10)N(3))(3)(C(4)H(8)O)(3)], (II), both contain La(III) atoms coordinated by three heterocyclic ligands and three tetrahydrofuran ligands, but their coordination geometries differ. Complex (I) has a mer-distorted octahedral geometry, while complex (II) has a fac-distorted configuration. The difference in the coordination geometries and the existence of asymmetric La-N bonding in the two complexes is associated with intramolecular C-H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe title compound, [Zn(2)(C(25)H(15)N(5)O(2))(2)]·2CH(2)Cl(2), is a dinuclear double-helical complex which lies on a crystallographic twofold axis. In the complex, both ligands are partitioned into two tridentate domains which allow each ligand to bridge both metal centres. Each Zn(II) atom is six-coordinated in a distorted octahedral environment formed by two amide N atoms, two quinoline N atoms and two pyridine N atoms from two different ligand molecules, with the central pyridine ring, unusually, bridging two Zn(II) atoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe self-assembly of 3,5-pyrazoledicarboxylic acid (H3pdc) and metal salts under hydrothermal conditions leads to the formation of a series of novel NaI-CuII-LnIII heterometallic coordination polymers, [[Na(H2O)4]2[Cu(pdc)2Ln(H2O)5]2 x 3H2O]n [Ln = La (1); Sm (2); Pr (3); Nd (4) and pdc3- = 3,5-pyrazoledicarboxylate]. X-Ray structure analyses show that these complexes all exhibit pairs of infinite, unexpected, cationic and anionic chains. It is the first successful attempt to construct unprecedented NaI-CuII-LnIII heterometallic coordination polymers with both infinite cationic and anionic chains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe title novel heterometallic 3d-4f coordination polymer, {[CuEr(2)(C(5)HN(2)O(4))(2)(C(2)O(4))(H(2)O)(6)].3H(2)O}(n), has a three-dimensional metal-organic framework composed of two types of metal atoms (one Cu(II) and two Er(III)) and two types of bridging anionic ligands [3,5-dicarboxylatopyrazolate(3-) (ptc(3-)) and oxalate]. The Cu(II) atom is four-coordinated in a square geometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Crystallogr Sect E Struct Rep Online
August 2008
In the title compound, {[Zn(2)(C(16)H(4)I(2)O(8))(H(2)O)(4)]·2H(2)O}(n), two crystallographically independent Zn(II) atoms are each located on a twofold rotation axis. Both Zn(II) atoms are in distorted octa-hedral coordination geometries: one is coordinated by six O atoms from four carboxyl-ate groups, while the other is coordinated by two carboxyl-ate groups and four water mol-ecules. The tetra-carboxyl-ate ligand mol-ecules connect the Zn(II) atoms, completing a three-dimensional metal-organic framework.
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