Molecular Barrel by a Hooping Strategy: Synthesis, Structure, and Selective CO2 Adsorption Facilitated by Lone Pair-π Interactions.
Qi-Qiang WangNa LuoXu-Dong WangYu-Fei AoYi-Fan ChenJun-Min LiuCheng-Yong SuDe-Xian WangMei-Xiang WangPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
A sophisticated molecular barrel 5 was efficiently constructed by hooping a 63-membered loop around a D3h-symmetric, shape-persistent bis(tetraoxacalix[2]arene[2]triazine) core. The hooping strategy involved 3-fold ring-closing metathesis (RCM) reactions of six branched olefin arms which were preanchored on the inner core. Through hooping, the loop tightens the cage structure and significantly enhances its stability toward nucleophilic decomposition. The X-ray crystal structure showed the molecular barrel bears three enclosed fan-shaped cavities as divided by the triazine rings and each of the cavities can hold a solvent CHCl3 or CH2Cl2 molecule. With the intrinsic porosity, the amorphous solids of 5 exhibit considerable CO2 uptake with an exceptionally large isosteric enthalpy. Lone pair (lp)-π interactions between the electron-deficient triazine rings and CO2 could contribute to the strong adsorption as supported by IR studies and DFT modeling.