A self-assembled Fe L cage complex internally decorated with acid functions is capable of accelerating the thioetherification of activated alcohols, ethers and amines by up to 1000-fold. No product inhibition is seen, and effective supramolecular catalysis can occur with as little as 5 % cage. The substrates are bound in the host with up to micromolar affinities, whereas the products show binding that is an order of magnitude weaker. Most importantly, the cage host alters the molecularity of the reaction: whereas the reaction catalyzed by simple acids is a unimolecular, S 1-type substitution process, the rate of the host-mediated process is dependent on the concentration of nucleophile. The molecularity of the cage-catalyzed reaction is substrate-dependent, and can be up to bimolecular. In addition, the catalysis can be prevented by a large excess of nucleophile, where substrate inhibition dominates, and the use of tritylated anilines as substrates causes a negative feedback loop, whereby the liberated product destroys the catalyst and stops the reaction.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.201902049 | DOI Listing |
J Org Chem
December 2024
Department of Chemistry and the UCR Center for Catalysis, University of California-Riverside, Riverside, California 92521, United States.
suite of internally functionalized FeL cage complexes has been synthesized with lipophilic end groups to allow dissolution in varied solvent mixtures, and the scope of their molecular recognition of a series of neutral, nonpolar guests has been analyzed. The lipophilic end groups confer cage solubility in solvents with a wide range of polarities, from hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP) to tetrahydrofuran, and the hosts show micromolar affinities for neutral guests, despite having no flat panels enclosing the cavity. These hosts allow interrogation of the effects of an internal functional group on guest binding properties, as well as solvent-based driving forces for recognition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
December 2024
Department of Inorganic Chemistry, University of Granada and "Unidad de Excelencia en Química (UEQ)", Avda. Fuente Nueva s/n, Granada 18071, Spain.
The thermodynamically controlled self-assembly of bis-bidentate quaterpyridine ligand, L = 2,2':5',5″:2″,2‴-quaterpyridine, with Cr and subsequent oxidation to Cr yields the first photoluminescent tetrahedral [CrL] molecular cage. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction reveals the presence of two homochiral cages (ΛΛΛΛ and ΔΔΔΔ) in the unit cell that crystallize as a racemic mixture. Additionally, a PF anion is observed inside the cavity, in line with isostructural cages built with Ni or Fe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Model
November 2024
Department of Chemistry, Can Tho University, Can Tho, 90000, Vietnam.
Context: While the pure Au cluster tends to exist in a 3D cage shape, the doubly doped W@Au is found to prefer a tubular form containing three five-membered Au rings stabilized by the W dimer vertically placed inside a tube-like Au framework. Formation of self-assembled nanotubes containing five-membered Au rings from the tube-like W@Au cluster is also feasible, and such a tubular structure constitutes an ideal building block for generating gold-assembled nanotubes, providing us with a useful approach for designing some novel tailor-made materials with interesting optoelectronic properties.
Methods: Density functional theory (DFT) calculations using the TPSS functional and the cc-pVDZ-PP basis set are employed to determine some noticeable effects of the doping of the W dimer on the structure, stability, and optical properties of pure Au16 gold clusters.
J Chem Phys
November 2024
Department of Basic Science, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo 153-8902, Japan.
Encapsulation of coordination complexes within the confined spaces of self-assembled hosts is an effective method for creating supramolecular assemblies with distinct chemical and physical properties. Recent studies with calix-resorcin[4]arene hydrogen-bonded hexameric capsules revealed that encapsulated metal complexes exhibit enhanced and blue-shifted photoluminescence compared to their unencapsulated forms. The photophysical change has been hypothetically attributed to encapsulation-induced confinement, which isolates the metal complex from the solvent, suppressing stabilization of the excited state of the guest by solvent reorganization and structural relaxation, and altering the local environment, such as solvent polarity and viscosity, around the guest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
November 2024
Key Laboratory of Polyoxometalate Science of Ministry of Education, Department of Chemistry, Northeast Normal University, Changchun, Jilin, 130024, P. R. China.
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