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Sigmoidally hydrochromic molecular porous crystal with rotatable dendrons.

Hiroshi YamagishiSae NakajimaJooyoung YooMasato OkazakiYouhei TakedaSatoshi MinakataKen AlbrechtKimihisa YamamotoIrene Badía-DomínguezMaria Moreno OlivaM Carmen Ruiz DelgadoYuka IkemotoHiroyasu SatoKenta ImotoKosuke NakagawaHiroko TokoroShin-Ichi OhkoshiYohei Yamamoto
Published in: Communications chemistry (2020)
Vapochromic behaviour of porous crystals is beneficial for facile and rapid detection of gaseous molecules without electricity. Toward this end, tailored molecular designs have been established for metal-organic, covalent-bonded and hydrogen-bonded frameworks. Here, we explore the hydrochromic chemistry of a van der Waals (VDW) porous crystal. The VDW porous crystal VPC-1 is formed from a novel aromatic dendrimer having a dibenzophenazine core and multibranched carbazole dendrons. Although the constituent molecules are connected via VDW forces, VPC-1 maintains its structural integrity even after desolvation. VPC-1 exhibits reversible colour changes upon uptake/release of water molecules due to the charge transfer character of the constituent dendrimer. Detailed structural analyses reveal that the outermost carbazole units alone are mobile in the crystal and twist simultaneously in response to water vapour. Thermodynamic analysis suggests that the sigmoidal water sorption is induced by the affinity alternation of the pore surface from hydrophobic to hydrophilic.
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