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1.
A series of amphiphilic bistable [2]rotaxanes--in which a ring-shaped component, the tetracationic cyclophane, cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene), has been assembled around two recognition sites, a tetrathia-fulvalene (TTF) unit and a 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) ring system, situated apart at different strategic locations within the central polyether section of an amphiphilic dumbbell component that is terminated by a hydrophobic tetraarylmethane-based stopper (near the TTF unit) at one end and by a hydrophilic tetraarylmethane-based stopper (near the DNP ring system) at the other end--has been designed and synthesized. The effects of systematic changes in the constitutions of the three ethylene glycol tails (diethylene or tetraethylene glycol) and end groups (hydroxyl or methoxyl functions) attached to the hydrophilic stoppers on Langmuir film balance and surface rheology experiments at 20 degreesC were examined to determine the monolayer stabilities and co-conformations of the [2] rotaxanes and their free dumbbell counterparts. These experiments allow us to propose a model for the rotaxane's structures at different surface pressures. All the [2]rotaxanes form stable Langmuir films. These films typically pass from a liquid-expanded region to a liquid-condensed region. The transition between the two regions was either directly observed or ascertained using film stability experiments. Film balance and surface rheology experiments showed that the addition of the tetracationic cyclophane component and hydroxyl end groups markedly increased the stabilities and viscoelasticity of the films.  相似文献   

2.
We report on the kinetics and ground-state thermodynamics associated with electrochemically driven molecular mechanical switching of three bistable [2]rotaxanes in acetonitrile solution, polymer electrolyte gels, and molecular-switch tunnel junctions (MSTJs). For all rotaxanes a pi-electron-deficient cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+) ring component encircles one of two recognition sites within a dumbbell component. Two rotaxanes (RATTF4+ and RTTF4+) contain tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) and 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) recognition units, but different hydrophilic stoppers. For these rotaxanes, the CBPQT4+ ring encircles predominantly (>90 %) the TTF unit at equilibrium, and this equilibrium is relatively temperature independent. In the third rotaxane (RBPTTF4+), the TTF unit is replaced by a pi-extended analogue (a bispyrrolotetrathiafulvalene (BPTTF) unit), and the CBPQT4+ ring encircles almost equally both recognition sites at equilibrium. This equilibrium exhibits strong temperature dependence. These thermodynamic differences were rationalized by reference to binding constants obtained by isothermal titration calorimetry for the complexation of model guests by the CBPQT4+ host in acetonitrile. For all bistable rotaxanes, oxidation of the TTF (BPTTF) unit is accompanied by movement of the CBPQT4+ ring to the DNP site. Reduction back to TTF0 (BPTTF0) is followed by relaxation to the equilibrium distribution of translational isomers. The relaxation kinetics are strongly environmentally dependent, yet consistent with a single electromechanical-switching mechanism in acetonitrile, polymer electrolyte gels, and MSTJs. The ground-state equilibrium properties of all three bistable [2]rotaxanes were reflective of molecular structure in all environments. These results provide direct evidence for the control by molecular structure of the electronic properties exhibited by the MSTJs.  相似文献   

3.
The synthesis of several pi-electron-donating monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene (MPTTF) derivatives, which conceptually can be divided into three classes containing none, one, or two triethylene glycol (TEG) substituents, is described. In all cases, the complexation between the pi-electron donating MPTTF unit and the pi-electron-deficient tetracationic cyclophane cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT(4+)) has been investigated using UV-vis dilution techniques. The results reveal that the strength of the binding between MPTTF derivatives and CBPQT(4+) is directly correlated to the pi-electron donating properties of the MPTTF derivatives. However, the pi-electron-donating properties of the MPTTF derivatives is not the only factor of importance. The results enclosed in the present studies demonstrate that the TEG substituents assist the complexation process most likely on account of their capacity to participate in [C-H...O] hydrogen bonding interactions with some of the alpha-CH protons in the bipyridinium units of CBPQT(4+) and the stabilizing effect that attachment of one or two TEG substituents to the MPTTF unit exerts upon complexation with CBPQT(4+) has been quantified to approximately 0.3 and 0.5 kcal mol-1, respectively. These results serve to lay an extended foundation for the understanding of which buttons to push when it comes to improve the design of bistable molecular switches based on (MP)TTF and CBPQT(4+).  相似文献   

4.
A synthetic approach to the preparation of [2]rotaxanes (1-5·6PF(6)) incorporating bispyridinium derivatives and two 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) units situated in the rod portions of their dumbbell components that are encircled by a single cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) tetracationic (CBPQT(4+)) ring has been developed. Since the π-electron-deficient bispyridinium units are introduced into the dumbbell components of the [2]rotaxanes 1-5·6PF(6), there are Coulombic charge-charge repulsions between these dicationic units and the CBPQT(4+) ring in the [2]rotaxanes. Thus, the CBPQT(4+) rings in the degenerate [2]rotaxanes exhibit slow shuttling between two DNP recognition sites on the (1)H NMR time-scale on account of the electrostatic barrier posed by the bispyridinium units, as demonstrated by variable-temperature (1)H NMR spectroscopy. Electrochemical experiments carried out on the [2]rotaxanes 1·6PF(6) and 2·6PF(6) indicate that the one-electron reduced bipyridinium radical cation in the dumbbell components of the [2]rotaxanes serves as an additional recognition site for the two-electron reduced CBPQT(2(˙+)) diradical cationic ring. Under appropriate conditions, the ring components in the degenerate rotaxanes 1·6PF(6) and 2·6PF(6) can shuttle along the recognition sites--two DNP units and one-electron reduced bipyridinium radical cation--under redox control.  相似文献   

5.
Two molecular shuttles/switches—a slow one and a fast one—in the shape of amphiphilic, bistable [2]rotaxanes have been synthesized and characterized. Both [2]rotaxanes contain a hydrophobic, tetraarylmethane and a hydrophilic, dendritic stopper. They are comprised of two π‐electron‐rich stations—a monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene unit and a 1,5‐dioxynaphthalene moiety—which can act as recognition sites for the tetracationic cyclophane, cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene), to reside around. In addition, a model [2]rotaxane, incorporating only a monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene unit in the rod section of the amphiphilic dumbbell component and cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene) as the ring component, has been investigated. The dumbbell‐shaped components were constructed using conventional synthetic methodologies to assemble 1) the hydrophobic, tetraarylmethane stopper and 2) the hydrophilic, dendritic stopper. Next, 3) the hydrophobic stopper was fused to the 1,5‐dioxynaphthalene moiety and/or the monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene unit by appropriate alkylations, followed by 4) attachment of the hydrophilic stopper, once again by alkylation to give the dumbbell‐shaped compounds. Finally, 5) the [2]rotaxanes were self‐assembled by using the dumbbells as templates for the formation of the encircling cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene) tetracations. The two [2]rotaxanes differ in their arrangement of the π‐electron‐rich units, one in which the SMe group of the monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene unit points toward the 1,5‐dioxynaphthalene moiety ( 2 ?4 PF6) and another in which it points away from the 1,5‐dioxynaphthalene moiety ( 3 ?4 PF6). This seemingly small difference in the orientation of the monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene unit leads to profound changes in the physical properties of these rotaxanes. The bistable [2]rotaxanes were both isolated as brown solids. 1H NMR and UV‐visible spectroscopy, and electrochemical investigations, reveal the presence of both possible translational isomers at ambient temperature. As a consequence of the existence of both possible translational isomers in these bistable [2]rotaxanes, they exhibit a complex electrochemical behavior, which is further complicated by the presence of folded conformations wherein the monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene unit is involved in an “alongside” interaction with the tetracationic cyclophane. In the molecular shuttle/switch 2 ?4 PF6 a “knob”, in the shape of the SMe group, is situated between the monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene and the 1,5‐dioxynaphthalene recognition sites, making it possible to isolate both translational isomers ( 2 ?4 PF6?GREEN and 2 ?4 PF6?RED) and to investigate the kinetics of the shuttling of the cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene) tetracation between the two recognition sites. The shuttling processes, which are accompanied by clearly detectable color changes, can be followed by 1H NMR and UV‐visible spectroscopy, allowing the rate constants and energies of activation for the translation of the cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene) tetracations between the two recognition sites to be determined. In the molecular shuttle/switch 3 ?4 PF6, there is no “knob” situated between the 1,5‐dioxynaphthalene and the monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene recognition sites, resulting in a considerably faster shuttling of the cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene) tetracation between these two sites, making the separation of the two possible translational isomers of 3 ?4 PF6 impractical. However, the shuttling of the cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene) tetracation can be followed by dynamic 1H NMR spectroscopy. At low temperatures, the major translational isomer is 3 ?4 PF6?RED, while 3 ?4 PF6?GREEN is the major isomer at higher temperature. In the bistable [2]rotaxanes shuttling of the cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene) tetracations can be driven by electrochemical oxidation of the monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene unit. In complexes in which one of the two dumbbell stoppers is missing, electrochemical oxidation causes dethreading.  相似文献   

6.
The template-directed synthesis of a [2]rotaxane, in which a pi-electron deficient ring component-cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene)-is assembled around a pi-electron rich asymmetric monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene unit on the rod section of an amphiphilic dumbbell component that is terminated by a hydrophilic dendritic stopper at one end and a hydrophobic tetraarylmethane stopper at the other end, is reported.  相似文献   

7.
Two-station [2]rotaxanes in the shape of a degenerate naphthalene (NP) shuttle and a nondegenerate monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene (MPTTF)/NP redox-controllable switch have been synthesized and characterized in solution. Their dumbbell-shaped components are composed of polyether chains interrupted along their lengths by (i) two pi-electron-rich stations-two NP moieties or a MPTTF unit and a NP moiety-with (ii) a rigid arylethynyl or butadiynyl spacer situated between the two stations and terminated by (iii) flexibly tethered hydrophobic stoppers at each end of the dumbbells. This modification was investigated as a means to simplify both molecular structure and switching function previously observed in related bistable [2]rotaxanes with flexible spacers between their stations and incorporating a cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+) ring. The nondegenerate MPTTF-NP switch was isolated as near isomer-free bistable [2]rotaxane. Utilization of MPTTF removes the cis/trans isomerization that characterizes the tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) parent core structure. Furthermore, only one translational isomer is observed (> 95 < 5), surprisingly across a wide temperature range (198-323 K), meaning that the CBPQT4+ ring component resides, to all intents and purposes, predominantly on the MPTTF unit in the ground state. As a consequence of these two effects, the assignment of NMR and UV-vis data is more simplified as compared to previous donor-acceptor bistable [2]rotaxanes. This development has not only allowed for much better control over the position of the ring component in the ground state but also for control over the location of the CBPQT4+ ring during solution-state switching experiments, triggered either chemically (1H NMR) or electrochemically (cyclic voltammetry). In this instance, the use of the rigid spacer defines an unambiguous distance of 1.5 nm over which the ring moves between the MPTTF and NP units. The degenerate NP/NP [2]rotaxane was used to investigate the shuttling barrier by dynamic 1H NMR spectroscopy for the movement of the CBPQT4+ ring across the new rigid spacer. It is evident from these measurements that the rigid spacer poses a much lower barrier to the 1.0 nm movement of the CBPQT4+ ring from one station to another as compared with previous systems-a finding that is thought to be a result of the combination of fewer favorable interactions between the spacer and the CBPQT4+ ring and a relatively unimpeded path between the two NP stations. This example augers well for exploiting rigidity during the development of well-defined bistable [2]rotaxanes, which are unencumbered by the excesses of structural conformations that have characterized the first generations of molecular switches based on the donor-acceptor recognition motif.  相似文献   

8.
A [2]catenane, which incorporates hydroquinone (HQ) and a sterically bulky tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) into a bismacrocycle, has been designed to probe the alongside charge-transfer (CT) interactions taking place between a TTF unit and one of the bipyridinium moieties in the tetracationic cyclophane cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+). A template-directed strategy employs the HQ unit as the primary template for formation of the tetracationic cyclophane CBPQT4+, affording the desired [2]catenane structure but as an uncharacteristic green solid. The X-ray crystal structure and detailed 13C NMR assignments have identified a stereoselective preference for catenation about the cis isomer. The 1H NMR spectroscopy, electrochemistry, and X-ray crystallography all confirm that the CBPQT4+ cyclophane encircles the HQ unit, thereby defining a structure which would normally determine a red color. The visible-NIR region of the absorption spectrum displays a band at approximately 740 nm that is unambiguously assigned to a TTF --> CBPQT4+ CT transition on the basis of resonance Raman spectroscopy using 785 nm excitation. The profile of the CT band changes depending on the ratio of the cis- to trans-TTF isomers in the [2]catenane for which the molar absorptivity of each isomer is estimated to be significantly different at epsilon max = 380 and 3690 M-1 cm-1, respectively. Molecular modeling studies confirmed that the observed difference in the absorption spectroscopic profile can be accounted for by both a better overlap of the HOMO(TTF) and LUMO+1(CBPQT4+) as well as a more stable face-to-face (pi...pi) conformation in the trans isomer compared to the edge-to-face cis isomer of the [2]catenane. The latter is arranged for pi-orbital overlap through the sulfur atoms of the TTF unit, thereby defining an [Spi...pi] interaction.  相似文献   

9.
Six different degenerate [2]rotaxanes were synthesized and characterized. The rotaxanes contained either two tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) units or two 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) ring systems, both of which serve as recognition sites for a cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+) ring. Three different spacer units were incorporated into the dumbbell components of the [2]rotaxanes between the recognition sites. They include a polyether chain, a terphenyl unit, and a diphenyl ether linker, all of which were investigated in order to probe the effect of the spacers on the rate of the shuttling process. Data from dynamic 1H NMR spectroscopy revealed a relatively small difference in the DeltaG++ values for the shuttling process in the [2]rotaxanes containing the three different spacers, in contrast to a large difference between the TTF-containing rotaxanes (18 kcal mol(-1)) and the DNP-containing rotaxanes (15 kcal mol(-1)). This 3 kcal mol(-1) difference is predominantly a result of a ground-state effect, reflecting the much stronger binding of TTF units to the CBPQT4+ ring in comparison with DNP ring systems. An examination of the enthalpic (DeltaH++) and entropic (DeltaS++) components for the shuttling process in the DNP-containing rotaxanes revealed significant differences between the three spacers, a property which could be important in designing new molecules for incorporation into molecular electronic and nanoelectromechanical (NEMs) devices.  相似文献   

10.
The ability to control the kinetic barriers governing the relative motions of the components in mechanically interlocked molecules is important for future applications of these compounds in molecular electronic devices. In this Full Paper, we demonstrate that bipyridinium (BIPY2+) dications fulfill the role as effective electrostatic barriers for controlling the shuttling and threading behavior for rotaxanes and pseudorotaxanes in aqueous environments. A degenerate [2]rotaxane, composed of two 1,5‐dioxynaphthalene (DNP) units flanking a central BIPY2+ unit in the dumbbell component and encircled by the cyclobis(paraquat‐p‐phenylene) (CBPQT4+) tetracationic cyclophane, has been synthesized employing a threading‐followed‐by‐stoppering approach. Variable‐temperature 1H NMR spectroscopy reveals that the barrier to shuttling of the CBPQT4+ ring over the central BIPY2+ unit is in excess of 17 kcal mol?1 at 343 K. Further information about the nature of the BIPY2+ unit as an electrostatic barrier was gleaned from related supramolecular systems, utilizing two threads composed of either two DNP units flanking a central BIPY2+ moiety or a central DNP unit flanked by a BIPY2+ moiety. The threading and dethreading processes of the CBPQT4+ ring with these compounds, which were investigated by spectrophotometric techniques, reveal that the BIPY2+ unit is responsible for affecting both the thermodynamics and kinetics of pseudorotaxane formation by means of an intramolecular self‐folding (through donor–acceptor interactions with the DNP unit), in addition to Coulombic repulsion. In particular, the free energy barrier to threading (Δ${G{{{\ne}\hfill \atop {\rm f}\hfill}}}The ability to control the kinetic barriers governing the relative motions of the components in mechanically interlocked molecules is important for future applications of these compounds in molecular electronic devices. In this Full Paper, we demonstrate that bipyridinium (BIPY(2+)) dications fulfill the role as effective electrostatic barriers for controlling the shuttling and threading behavior for rotaxanes and pseudorotaxanes in aqueous environments. A degenerate [2]rotaxane, composed of two 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) units flanking a central BIPY(2+) unit in the dumbbell component and encircled by the cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT(4+)) tetracationic cyclophane, has been synthesized employing a threading-followed-by-stoppering approach. Variable-temperature (1)H?NMR spectroscopy reveals that the barrier to shuttling of the CBPQT(4+) ring over the central BIPY(2+) unit is in excess of 17 kcal mol(-1) at 343 K. Further information about the nature of the BIPY(2+) unit as an electrostatic barrier was gleaned from related supramolecular systems, utilizing two threads composed of either two DNP units flanking a central BIPY(2+) moiety or a central DNP unit flanked by a BIPY(2+) moiety. The threading and dethreading processes of the CBPQT(4+) ring with these compounds, which were investigated by spectrophotometric techniques, reveal that the BIPY(2+) unit is responsible for affecting both the thermodynamics and kinetics of pseudorotaxane formation by means of an intramolecular self-folding (through donor-acceptor interactions with the DNP unit), in addition to Coulombic repulsion. In particular, the free energy barrier to threading (ΔG(f)(++)) of the CBPQT(4+) for the case of the thread composed of a DNP flanked by two BIPY(2+) units was found to be as high as 21.7 kcal mol(-1) at room temperature. These results demonstrate that we can effectively employ the BIPY(2+) unit to serve as electrostatic barriers in water in order to gain control over the motions of the CBPQT(4+) ring in both mechanically interlocked and supramolecular systems.  相似文献   

11.
The mild reaction conditions, remarkable functional group compatibility, and complete regioselectivity of the Cu-catalyzed Huisgen 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition ("click chemistry") between organic azides and terminal alkynes have led to a threading-followed-by-stoppering approach to the synthesis of donor-acceptor rotaxanes incorporating cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+) as the pi-accepting ring component. Rotaxane formation is initiated by reacting azide-functionalized pseudorotaxanes containing pi-donating 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) recognition units with appropriate alkyne-functionalized stoppers. The high yields obtained in this efficient, kinetically controlled post-assembly covalent modification, as well as the excellent convergence of the synthetic protocol, are demonstrated by the preparation of [2]-, [3]-, and [4]rotaxanes containing multiple DNP/CBPQT4+ donor-acceptor recognition motifs.  相似文献   

12.
The complexation between a number of different pi-electron donating TTF derivatives and the pi-electron accepting tetracationic cyclophane cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT(4+)) has been studied by (1)H NMR and UV-vis spectroscopy. The results demonstrate that the strength of association between the donors (TTF derivatives) and acceptor (CBPQT(4+)) is strongly dependent on the pi-electron donating properties (measured by the first redox potential ) of the TTF derivatives. However, the first redox potential () is not the only factor of importance. The extended pi-surface of the TTF derivatives also exerts a stabilizing influence upon complexation. The kinetics for the complexation-decomplexation were studied using (1)H NMR spectroscopy and are related to the bulkiness of the TTF derivatives. These effects may serve to improve the design of interlocked molecular systems, especially (bistable) molecular switches, in which CBPQT(4+) and a derivatized TTF unit are incorporated.  相似文献   

13.
A multicomponent [2]rotaxane designed to operate as a molecular shuttle driven by light energy has been constructed, and its properties have been investigated. The system is composed of (1) a light-fueled power station, capable of using the photon energy to create a charge-separated state, and (2) a mechanical switch, capable of utilizing such a photochemically generated driving force to bring about controllable molecular shuttling motions. The light-fueled power station is, in turn, a dyad comprising (i) a pi-electron-accepting fullerene (C60) component and (ii) a light-harvesting porphyrin (P) unit which acts as an electron donor in the excited state. The mechanical switch is a redox-active bistable [2]rotaxane moiety that consists of (i) a tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) unit as an efficient pi-electron-donor station, (ii) a dioxynaphthalene (DNP) unit as a second pi-electron-rich station, and (iii) a tetracationic cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+) pi-electron-acceptor cyclophane, which encapsulates the better pi-electron-donating TTF station. Diethylene glycol spacers were conveniently introduced between the electroactive components in the dumbbell-shaped thread to facilitate the template-directed synthesis of the [2]rotaxane. A modular synthetic approach was undertaken for the overall synthesis of this multicomponent bistable [2]rotaxane, beginning with the syntheses of the P-C60 dyad unit and the two-station TTF-DNP-based [2]rotaxane separately, using conventional synthetic methodologies. These two components were finally stitched together by an esterification to afford the target rotaxane. Its structure was characterized by 1H NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry as well as by UV-vis-NIR absorption spectroscopy and voltammetry. The observations reflect remarkable electronic interactions between the various units, pointing to the existence of folded conformations in solution. The redox-driven shuttling process of the CBPQT4+ ring between the two competitive electron-rich recognition units, namely, TTF and DNP, was investigated by electrochemistry and spectroelectrochemistry as a means to verify its operational behavior prior to the photophysical studies related to light-driven operation. The oxidation process of the TTF unit is dramatically hampered in the rotaxane, thereby reducing the efficiency of the shuttling motion. These results confirm that, as the structural complexity increases, the overall function of the system no longer depends simply on its "primary" structure but also on higher-level effects which are reminiscent of the secondary and tertiary structures of biomolecules.  相似文献   

14.
Four donor-acceptor [2]catenanes with cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+) as the pi-electron-accepting cyclophane and 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP)-containing macrocyclic polyethers as pi-electron donor rings have been synthesized under mild conditions, employing Cu+-catalyzed Huisgen 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition and Cu2+-mediated Eglinton coupling in the final steps of their syntheses. Oligoether chains carrying terminal alkynes or azides were used as the key structural features in template-directed cyclizations of [2]pseudorotaxanes to give the [2]catenanes. Both reactions proceed well with precursors of appropriate oligoether chain lengths but fail when there are only three oxygen atoms in the oligoether chains between the DNP units and the reactive functional groups. The solid-state structures of the donor-acceptor [2]catenanes confirm their mechanically interlocked nature, stabilized by [pi...pi], [C-H...pi], and [C-H...Omicron] interactions, and point to secondary noncovalent contacts between 1,3-butadiyne and 1,2,3-triazole subunits and one of the bipyridinum units of the CBPQT4+ ring. These contacts are characterized by the roughly parallel orientation of the inner bipyridinium ring system and the 1,2,3-triazole and 1,3-butadiyne units, as well as by the short [pi...pi] distances of 3.50 and 3.60 A, respectively. Variable-temperature 1H NMR spectroscopy has been used to identify and quantify the barriers to the conformationally and co-conformationally dynamic processes. The former include the rotations of the phenylene and the bipyridinium ring systems around their substituent axes, whereas the latter are confined to the circumrotation of the CBPQT4+ ring around the DNP binding site. The barriers for the three processes were found to be successively 14.4, 14.5-17.5, and 13.1-15.8 kcal mol-1. Within the limitations of the small dataset investigated, emergent trends in the barrier heights can be recognized: the values decrease with the increasing size of the pi-electron-donating macrocycle and tend to be lower in the sterically less encumbered series of [2]catenanes containing the 1,3-butadiyne moiety.  相似文献   

15.
In pursuit of a neutral bistable [2]rotaxane made up of two tetraarylmethane stoppers--both carrying one isopropyl and two tert-butyl groups located at the para positions on each of three of the four aryl rings--known to permit the slippage of the pi-electron-donating 1,5-dinaphtho[38]crown-10 (1/5DNP38C10) at the thermodynamic instigation of pi-electron-accepting recognition sites, in this case, pyromellitic diimide (PmI) and 1,4,5,8-naphthalenetetracarboxylate diimide (NpI) units separated from each other along the rod section of the rotaxane's dumbbell component, and from the para positions of the fourth aryl group of the two stoppers by pentamethylene chains, a modular approach was employed in the synthesis of the dumbbell-shaped compound NpPmD, as well as of its two degenerate counterparts, one (PmPmD) which contains two PmI units and the other (NpNpD) which contains two NpI units. The bistable [2]rotaxane NpPmR, as well as its two degenerate analogues PmPmR and NpNpR, were obtained from the corresponding dumbbell-shaped compounds NpPmD, PmPmD, and NpNpD and 1/5DNP38C10 by slippage. Dynamic 1H NMR spectroscopy in CD2Cl2 revealed that shuttling of the 1/5DNP38C10 ring occurs in NpNpR and PmPmR, with activation barriers of 277 K of 14.0 and 10.9 kcal mol(-1), respectively, reflecting a much more pronounced donor-acceptor stabilizing interaction involving the NpI units over the PmI ones. The photophysical and electrochemical properties of the three neutral [2]rotaxanes and their dumbbell-shaped precursors have also been investigated in CH2Cl2. Interactions between 1/5DNP38C10 and PmI and NpI units located within the rod section of the dumbbell components of the [2]rotaxane give rise to the appearance of charge-transfer bands, the energies of which correlate with the electron-accepting properties of the two diimide moieties. Comparison between the positions of the visible absorption bands in the three [2]rotaxanes shows that, in NpPmR, the major translational isomer is the one in which 1/5DNP38C10 encircles the NpI unit. Correlations of the reduction potentials for all the compounds studied confirm that, in this non-degenerate [2]rotaxane, one of the translational isomers predominates. Furthermore, after deactivation of the NpI unit by one-electron reduction, the 1/5DNP38C10 macrocycle moves to the PmI unit. Li+ ions have been found to strengthen the interaction between the electron-donating crown ether and the electron-accepting diimide units, particularly the PmI one. Titration experiments show that two Li+ ions are involved in the strengthening of the donor-acceptor interaction. Addition of Li+ ions to NpPmR induces the 1/5DNP38C10 macrocycle to move from the NpI to the PmI unit. The Li+-ion-promoted switching of NpPmR in a 4:1 mixture of CD2Cl2 and CD3COCD3 has also been shown by 1H NMR spectroscopy to involve the mechanical movement of the 1/5DNP38C10 macrocycle from the NpI to the PmI unit, a process that can be reversed by adding an excess of [12]crown-4 to sequester the Li+ ions.  相似文献   

16.
The central component of the programmable molecular switch recently demonstrated by Stoddart and Heath is [2]rotaxane, which consists of a cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) shuttle (CBPQT(4+))(PF(6)(-))(4) (the ring) encircling a finger and moving between two stations, tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) and 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP). As a step toward understanding the mechanism of this switch, we report here its electronic structure using two flavors of density functional theory (DFT): B3LYP/6-31G and PBE/6-31G. We find that the electronic structure of composite [2]rotaxane can be constructed reasonably well from its parts by combining the states of separate stations (TTF and DNP) with or without the (CBPQT)(PF(6))(4) shuttle around them. That is, the "CBPQT@TTF" state, (TTF)(CBPQT)(PF(6))(4)-(DNP), is described well as a combination of the (TTF)(CBPQT)(PF(6))(4) complex and free DNP, and the "CBPQT@DNP" state, (TTF)-(DNP)(CBPQT)(PF(6))(4), is described well as a combination of free TTF and the (DNP)(CBPQT)(PF(6))(4) complex. This allows an aufbau or a "bottom-up" approach to predict the complicated [n]rotaxanes in terms of their components. This should be useful in designing new components to lead to improved properties of the switches. A critical function of the (CBPQT(4+))(PF(6)(-))(4) shuttle in switching is that it induces a downshift of the frontier orbital energy levels of the station it is on (TTF or DNP). This occurs because of the net positive electrostatic potential exerted by the CBPQT(4+) ring, which is located closer to the active station than the four PF(6)(-)'s. This downshift alters the relative position of energy levels between TTF and DNP, which in turn alters the electron tunneling rate between them, even when the shuttle is not involved directly in the actual tunneling process. Based on this switching mechanism, the "CBPQT@TTF" state is expected to be a better conductor since it has better aligned levels between the two stations. A second potential role of the (CBPQT(4+))(PF(6)(-))(4) shuttle in switching is to provide low-lying LUMO levels. If the shuttle is involved in the actual tunneling process, the reduced HOMO-LUMO gap (from 3.6 eV for the isolated finger to 1.1 eV for "CBPQT@TTF" or to 0.6 eV for "CBPQT@DNP" using B3LYP) would significantly facilitate the electron tunneling through the system. This might occur in a folded conformation where a direct contact between free station and the shuttle on the other station is possible. When this becomes the main switching mechanism, we expect the "CBPQT@DNP" state to become a better conductor because its HOMO-LUMO gap is smaller and because its HOMO and LUMO are localized at different stations (HOMO exclusively at TTF and LUMO at CBPQT encircling DNP) so that the HOMO-to-LUMO tunneling would be through the entire molecule of [2]rotaxane. Thus an essential element in designing these switches is to determine the configuration of the molecules (e.g., through self-assembled monolayers or incorporation of conformation stabilizing units).  相似文献   

17.
Two [2]catenanes incorporating bispyrrolotetrathiafulvalene (BPTTF) and weaker aryl donors, hydroquinone (HQ) and 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP), respectively, have been prepared and characterized. These [2]catenanes show a predominant amount (>95:5) of the co-conformation in which either the HQ or the DNP unit is encircled by a tetracationic cyclophane, cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+), contrary to what is observed in systems based on the parent tetrathiafulvalene (TTF). These new [2]catenanes act effectively as molecular switches which are always configured in the "on" state.  相似文献   

18.
Bistable [2]rotaxanes display controllable switching properties in solution, on surfaces, and in devices. These phenomena are based on the electrochemically and electrically driven mechanical shuttling motion of the ring-shaped component, cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT(4+)), between a monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene (mpTTF) unit and a 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) unit located along a dumbbell component. The most stable state of the rotaxane (CBPQT(4+)@mpTTF) is that in which the CBPQT(4+) ring encircles the mpTTF unit, but a second less favored metastable co-conformation with the CBPQT(4+) ring surrounding the DNP (CBPQT(4+)@DNP) can be formed experimentally. For both co-conformations of an amphiphilic bistable [2]rotaxane, we report here the structure and surface pressure-area isotherm of a Langmuir monolayer (LM) on a water subphase as a function of the area per molecule. These results from atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) studies are validated by comparing with experiments based on similar amphiphilic rotaxanes. For both co-conformations, we found that as the area per molecule increases the thickness of the LM decreases while the molecular tilt increases. Both co-conformations led to similar LM thicknesses at the same packing area. From the simulated LM systems, we calculated the electron density profiles of the monolayer as a function of area per molecule, which show good agreement with experimental analyses from synchrotron X-ray reflectivity measurements of related systems. Decomposing the overall electron density profiles into component contributions, we found distinct differences in molecular packing in the film depending upon the co-conformation. Thus we find that the necessity of allowing the tetracationic ring to become solvated by water leads to differences in the structures for the two co-conformations in the LM. At the same packing area, the value of the overall tilt angle does not seem to be sensitive to whether the CBPQT(4+) ring is encircling the mpTTF or the DNP unit. However, the conformation of the dumbbell does depend on the location of the CBPQT(4+) ring, which is reflected in the segmental tilt angles of the mpTTF and DNP units. Using the Kirkwood-Buff formula in conjunction with MD calculations, we find the surface pressure-area isotherms for each co-conformation in which the CBPQT(4+)@mpTTF form has smaller surface tension and therefore larger surface pressure than the CBPQT(4+)@DNP at the same packing area, differences that decreases with increasing area per molecule, which is verified experimentally.  相似文献   

19.
Novel [2]rotaxanes containing the tetracationic cyclophane cyclobis(paraquat-4,4-biphenylene) and a dumbbell-shaped molecular thread incorporating a photoactive diarylcycloheptatriene station as well as a photoinactive anisol station have been synthesized with yields of nearly 50 % by the alkylative endcapping method. The rotaxane was transformed into the related rotaxane incorporating a diaryl tropylium unit by electrochemical oxidation. The precursor of the cycloheptatrienyl rotaxane, the related pseudorotaxane, and the rotaxanes incorporating the diarylcycloheptatriene and the corresponding tropylium unit were characterized by (1)HNMR spectroscopy and UV/Vis spectroscopy. According to the NMR spectra, both the cycloheptatriene and the tropylium rotaxane possess a folded conformation enabling the tetracationic cyclophane to interact with two stations. The diarylcycloheptatriene station is incorporated inside the cavity of the cyclophane and the anisol station resides alongside the bipyridinium unit of the cyclophane. In contrast, the anisol station is inside the cyclophane in the tropylium rotaxane. The exchange between both conformations can be achieved by introducing the methoxy leaving group into the cycloheptatriene ring; the tropylium rotaxane is generated by photoheterolysis of this methoxy-substituted rotaxane, which reacts thermally back to the cycloheptatriene rotaxane, thus closing the switching cycle. These induced conformational changes achieve a so-called molecular machine.  相似文献   

20.
The influences of different physical environments on the thermodynamics associated with one key step in the switching mechanism for a pair of bistable catenanes and a pair of bistable rotaxanes have been investigated systematically. The two bistable catenanes are comprised of a cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+) ring, or its diazapyrenium-containing analogue, that are interlocked with a macrocyclic polyether component that incorporates the strong tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) donor unit and the weaker 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) donor unit. The two bistable rotaxanes are comprised of a CBPQT4+ ring, interlocked with a dumbbell component in which one incorporates TTF and DNP units, whereas the other incorporates a monopyrrolotetrathiafulvalene (MPTTF) donor and a DNP unit. Two consecutive cycles of a variable scan rate cyclic voltammogram (10-1500 mV s(-1)) performed on all of the bistable switches (approximately 1 mM) in MeCN electrolyte solutions (0.1 M tetrabutylammonium hexafluorophosphate) across a range of temperatures (258-303 K) were recorded in a temperature-controlled electrochemical cell. The second cycle showed different intensities of the two features that were observed in the first cycle when the cyclic voltammetry was recorded at fast scan rates and low temperatures. The first oxidation peak increases in intensity, concomitant with a decrease in the intensity of the second oxidation peak. This variation changed systematically with scan rate and temperature and has been assigned to the molecular mechanical movements within the catenanes and rotaxanes of the CBPQT4+ ring from the DNP to the TTF unit. The intensities of each peak were assigned to the populations of each co-conformation, and the scan-rate variation of each population was analyzed to obtain kinetic and thermodynamic data for the movement of the CBPQT4+ ring. The Gibbs free energy of activation at 298 K for the thermally activated movement was calculated to be 16.2 kcal mol(-1) for the rotaxane, and 16.7 and 19.2 kcal mol(-1) for the bipyridinium- and diazapyrenium-based bistable catenanes, respectively. These values differ from those obtained for the shuttling and circumrotational motions of degenerate rotaxanes and catenanes, respectively, indicating that the detailed chemical structure influences the rates of movement. In all cases, when the same bistable compounds were characterized in an electrolyte gel, the molecular mechanical motion slowed down significantly, concomitant with an increase in the activation barriers by more than 2 kcal mol(-1). Irrespective of the environment--solution, self-assembled monolayer or solid-state polymer gel--and of the molecular structure--rotaxane or catenane--a single and generic switching mechanism is observed for all bistable molecules.  相似文献   

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