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Crystalline Supramolecular Gyroscope with a Water Molecule as an Ultrasmall Polar Rotator Modulated by Charge-Assisted Hydrogen Bonds.

Wang LiChun-Ting HeYing ZengCheng-Min JiZi-Yi DuWei-Xiong ZhangXiao-Ming Chen
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
A new strategy for the construction of crystalline molecular rotors is presented. The combination of a conformation-modifiable macrocyclic host and two cooperative guests affords one supramolecular gyroscope-like compound, (t-BuNH3)(18-crown-6)[ZnCl3(H2O)], in which the coordinated water molecule functions as an ultrasmall polar rotator, revealed by its significant dielectric relaxation and the molecular dynamics simulations. In addition, such a compound can reversibly undergo a polar-to-polar phase transition triggered by the changed conformation of the 18-crown-6 host, leading to a switchable on/off rotation of water molecule, well controlled by strength and direction of charge-assisted hydrogen bonds.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • ionic liquid
  • molecular docking
  • room temperature
  • single molecule
  • energy transfer