A 3-fold "butterfly valve" in command of the encapsulation's kinetic stability. Molecular baskets at work.

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY(2008)

引用 48|浏览5
暂无评分
摘要
Molecular basket 1, composed of a semirigid tris-norbornadiene framework and three revolving pyridine-based gates at the rim, has been built to "dynamically" enclose space and as such regulate molecular encapsulation. The gates were shown to fold via intramolecular hydrogen bonding and thereby form a G(3v) symmetrical receptor: the H-1 NMR resonance for the amide N-H protons of the pyridine gates appeared downfield (delta = 10.98 ppm), and the N-H vibrational stretch (IR) was observed at 3176 cm(-1). Accordingly, density functional theory (DFT, B3LYP) investigations revealed for the closed conformers of 1 to be energetically the most stable and dominant. The gearing of the pyridine "gates", about their axis, led to the interconversion of two dynamic enantiomers 1(A) and 1(B) comprising the clockwise and counterclockwise seam of intramolecular hydrogen bonds. Dynamic H-1 NMR spectroscopic measurements and line-shape simulations suggested that the energy barrier of 10.0 kcal/mol (Delta G(A/B)(double dagger), 298 K) is required for the 1(A/B) interconversion, when CCl4 occupies the cavity of 1. Likewise, the activation free energy for CCl4 departing the basket was found to be 13.1 kcal/mol (Delta G(double dagger), 298 K), whereas the thermodynamic stability of 1:CCl4 complex was -2.7 kcal/mol (Delta G degrees, 298 K). In view of that, CCI4 (but also (CH3)(3)CBr) was proposed to escape from, and a molecule of solvent to enter, the basket when the gates rotate about their axis: the exit of CCl4 requires the activation energy of 12.7 kcal/mol (Delta G(A/B)(double dagger) + Delta G degrees), similar to the experimentally found 13.1 kcal/mol (Delta G(double dagger)).
更多
查看译文
关键词
kinetics
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要