Corroles are synthetic porphyrin analogs that contain one carbon atom lesser and bear a trianionic N4 metal-chelating core. They require in-depth preparative chemistry, demonstrate unique coordination chemistry and have impressive and diverse physical properties, and these are commonly compared to their respective porphyrins. The corrole's macrocyclic system is inherently electron rich and chelates metal ions in a more compact, less symmetric tetranitrogen cavity compared to that of porphyrins. Herein, we cover the highlights of the corrole research through the decades by first reviewing, in a chronological sense, multi-step syntheses; some routes have since been discontinued. This is followed by describing post-functionalization of already formed corroles reactions performed on either the macrocycle's periphery or the inner nitrogen atoms or on the existing substituents. We do also mention milestones in literature reviewing, publication of encyclopedias, and the creation of professional organizations and conferences (ICPP) which make up the corrole/porphyrin research landscape. Also highlighted are still existing challenges and future perspectives.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cs01137e | DOI Listing |
J Am Chem Soc
June 2023
Schulich Faculty of Chemistry, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel.
The renaissance in corrole chemistry is strongly correlated with synthetic breakthroughs that started in 1999, regarding the one-pot rather than multistep syntheses of this heme-like N4 macrocycle. This largely improved synthetic accessibility allowed for technological advances wherein the corresponding metal complexes have since been introduced as key elements. Great emphasis was devoted to the elucidation of the unique fundamental features that distinguish corrole ligands, among them outstanding electron donation (σ by the N atoms and π by the macrocycle) to transition metals chelated by them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Soc Rev
January 2023
Schulich Faculty of Chemistry, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel.
Corroles are synthetic porphyrin analogs that contain one carbon atom lesser and bear a trianionic N4 metal-chelating core. They require in-depth preparative chemistry, demonstrate unique coordination chemistry and have impressive and diverse physical properties, and these are commonly compared to their respective porphyrins. The corrole's macrocyclic system is inherently electron rich and chelates metal ions in a more compact, less symmetric tetranitrogen cavity compared to that of porphyrins.
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