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1.
Chem Sci ; 13(18): 5325-5332, 2022 May 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35655559

RESUMO

Discrete nanocages provide a way to solubilize, separate, and tune the properties of fullerenes, but these 3D receptors cannot usually be synthesized easily from inexpensive starting materials, limiting their utility. Herein, we describe the first fullerene-binding nanocage (Cage4+) that can be made efficiently on a gram scale. Cage4+ was prepared in up to 57% yield by the formation of pyridinium linkages between complemantary porphyrin components that are themselves readily accessible. Cage4+ binds C60 and C70 with large association constants (>108 M-1), thereby solubilizing these fullerenes in polar solvents. Fullerene association and redox-properties were subsequently investigated across multiple charge states of the host-guest complexes. Remarkably, neutral and singly reduced fullerenes bind with similar strengths, leaving their 0/1- redox couples minimally perturbed and fully reversible, whereas other hosts substantially alter the redox properties of fullerenes. Thus, C60@Cage4+ and C70@Cage4+ may be useful as solubilized fullerene derivatives that preserve the inherent electron-accepting and electron-transfer capabilities of the fullerenes. Fulleride dianions were also found to bind strongly in Cage4+, while further reduction is centered on the host, leading to lowered association of the fulleride guest in the case of C60 2-.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(41): 16993-17003, 2021 10 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34596386

RESUMO

The host-guest chemistry of metal-organic nanocages is typically driven by thermodynamically favorable interactions with their guests such that uptake and release of guests can be controlled by switching this affinity on or off. Herein, we achieve this effect by reducing porphyrin-walled cationic nanoprisms 1a12+ and 1b12+ to zwitterionic states that rapidly uptake organometallic cations Cp*2Co+ and Cp2Co+, respectively. Cp*2Co+ binds strongly (Ka = 1.3 × 103 M-1) in the neutral state 1a0 of host 1a12+, which has its three porphyrin walls doubly reduced and its six (bipy)Pt2+ linkers singly reduced (bipy = 2,2'-bipyridine). The less-reduced states of the host 1a3+ and 1a9+ also bind Cp*2Co+, though with lower affinities. The smaller Cp2Co+ cation binds strongly (Ka = 1.7 × 103 M-1) in the 3e- reduced state 1b9+ of the (tmeda)Pt2+-linked host 1b12+ (tmeda = N,N,N',N'-tetramethylethylenediamine). Upon reoxidation of the hosts with Ag+, the guests become trapped to provide unprecedented metastable cation-in-cation complexes Cp*2Co+@1a12+ and Cp2Co+@1b12+ that persist for >1 month. Thus, dramatic kinetic effects reveal a way to confine the guests in thermodynamically unfavorable environments. Experimental and DFT studies indicate that PF6- anions kinetically stabilize Cp*2Co+@1a12+ through electrostatic interactions and by influencing conformational changes of the host that open and close its apertures. However, when Cp*2Co+@1a12+ was prepared using ferrocenium (Fc+) instead of Ag+ to reoxidize the host, dissociation was accelerated >200× even though neither Fc+ nor Fc have any observable affinity for 1a12+. This finding shows that metastable host-guest complexes can respond to subtler stimuli than those required to induce guest release from thermodynamically favorable complexes.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 59(17): 12616-12624, 2020 Sep 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32812428

RESUMO

Redox-active metal-organic nanocages are of interest for many applications, but the development of cages with extensive redox activity is often hindered by their limited stability and solubility across multiple charge states. This report reveals that these properties can be tuned for cages with redox-active walls by incorporating additional redox activity into the linkers. In particular, new +12 charged triangular nanoprisms 1a,b were formed from three electroactive tetrakis(3-pyridyl)porphyrin walls linked by six [(TMEDA)Pt]2+ (for 1a) or [(2,2'-bipy)Pt]2+ (for 1b) vertices, the latter of which are also electroactive. Thus, 1b exhibits extensive redox activity, consisting of two porphyrin-centered (x3) and two 2,2'-bipy-centered (x6) reductions that provide reversible access to +12, +9, +3, 0, and -6 charge states, whereas 1a undergoes only two, porphyrin-centered (x3) reversible reductions. Comparisons of 1a and 1b (and monomeric control compounds) by cyclic voltammetry and UV-vis-NIR spectroelectrochemistry show that the redox-activity of the linkers in 1b lowers the second reduction potential of the porphyrins by 100 mV and improves the stability and solubility of this structure under highly reducing conditions (e.g., -2.25 V vs Fc+/0 in MeCN). These findings reveal new principles for controlling the properties of highly electroactive molecular nanostructures. Anion exchange rates (≫103 s-1) were also probed, showing that the narrow apertures (≤3 Å van der Waals width) of 1a,b do not impede the loss/gain of PF6- anions during redox processes.

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