Login / Signup

Topologically Controlled Syntheses of Unimolecular Oligo[ n ]catenanes.

Nathan D ColleyMark A NosigliaSheila L TranGray H HarlanChristy ChangRuihan LiAbigail O DelawderYipei ZhangJonathan C Barnes
Published in: ACS central science (2022)
Catenanes are a well-known class of mechanically interlocked molecules that possess chain-like architectures and have been investigated for decades as molecular machines and switches. However, the synthesis of higher-order catenanes with multiple, linearly interlocked molecular rings has been greatly impeded by the generation of unwanted oligomeric byproducts and figure-of-eight topologies that compete with productive ring closings. Here, we report two general strategies for the synthesis of oligo[ n ]catenanes that rely on a molecular "zip-tie" strategy, where the "zip-tie" is a central core macrocycle precursor bearing two phenanthroline (phen) ligands to make odd-numbered oligo[ n ]catenanes, or a preformed asymmetric iron(II) complex consisting of two macrocycle precursors bearing phen and terpyridine ligands to make even-numbered oligo[ n ]catenanes. In either case, preformed macrocycles or [2]catenanes are threaded onto the central "zip-tie" core using metal templation prior to ring-closing metathesis (RCM) reactions that generate several mechanical bonds in one pot. Using these synthetic strategies, a family of well-defined linear oligo[ n ]catenanes were synthesized, where n = 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 interlocked molecular rings, and n = 6 represents the highest number of linearly interlocked rings reported to date for any isolated unimolecular oligo[ n ]catenane.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • drinking water
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution