Role of the Auxiliary Ligand in the Spontaneous Resolution of Enantiomers in Three-Dimensional Coordination Polymers.
Hui-Jun ChenLu XuMan-Ting ChenLi-Rong LinGui-Lin ZhuangLa-Sheng LongLan-Sun ZhengPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2021)
Four pairs of chiral 3D coordination polymers (CPs), [Zn2(BDC)(lac)(DMF)]·guest (2) (H2BDC = benzene dicarboxylic acid; H2lac = lactic acid; guest = 1.5DMF + i-PrOH), [Co2(BDC)(lac)(DMF)]·guest (3) (guest = DMF + 2H2O), [Fe4(BDC)3(lac)2(DMF)2](CO3)·guest (4) (guest = DMF + 2H2O), and {Zn11(BPDC)6(lac)6[NH2(CH3)2]2}·guest (H2BPDC = 3,3'-biphenyldicarboxylic acid; guest = 6DMF + 18H2O) (5), are prepared through the reactions of racemic lactic acid (rac-H2lac) with different metal ions and auxiliary ligands. Structural analyses and DFT calculations reveal that forming more and stronger coordination bonds between the auxiliary ligand and metal ions is more conducive to the spontaneous resolution of enantiomers in 3D CPs than simply increasing the entropy of the auxiliary ligand itself.