11 research outputs found
Homochiral Metal–Organic Cage for Gas Chromatographic Separations
Metal–organic
cages (MOCs) as a new type of porous material
with well-defined cavities were extensively pursued because of their
relative ease of synthesis and their potential applications in host–guest
chemistry, molecular recognition, separation, catalysis, gas storage,
and drug delivery. Here, we first reported that a homochiral MOC [Zn<sub>3</sub>L<sub>2</sub>] is explored to fabricate [Zn<sub>3</sub>L<sub>2</sub>] coated capillary column for high-resolution gas chromatographic
separation of a wide range of analytes, including <i>n</i>-alkanes, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and positional isomers,
especially for racemates. Various kinds of racemates such as alcohols,
diols, epoxides, ethers, halohydrocarbons, and esters were separated
with good enantioselectivity and reproducibility on the [Zn<sub>3</sub>L<sub>2</sub>] coated capillary column. The fabricated [Zn<sub>3</sub>L<sub>2</sub>] coated capillary column exhibited significant chiral
recognition complementary to that of a commercial β-DEX 120
column and our recently reported homochiral porous organic cage CC3-R
coated column. The results show that the homochiral MOCs will be very
attractive as a new type of chiral selector in separation science
Chiral Memory in Dynamic Transformation from Porous Organic Cages to Covalent Organic Frameworks for Enantiorecognition Analysis
The preservation of chirality during a transformation
process,
known as the “chiral memory” effect, has garnered significant
attention across multiple research disciplines. Here, we first report
the retention of the original chiral structure during dynamic covalent
chemistry (DCC)-induced structural transformation from porous organic
cages into covalent organic frameworks (COFs). A total of six two-dimensional
chiral COFs constructed by entirely achiral building blocks were obtained
through the DCC-induced substitution of chiral linkers in a homochiral
cage (CC3-R or -S) using achiral
amine monomers. Homochirality of these COFs resulted from the construction
of 3-fold-symmetric benzene-1,3,5-methanimine cores with a propeller-like
configuration of one single-handedness throughout the cage-to-COF
transformation. The obtained chiral COFs can be further utilized as
fluorescence sensors or chiral stationary phases for gas chromatography
with high enantioselectivity. The present study thus highlighted the
great potential to expand the scope of functional chiral materials
via DCC-induced crystal-to-crystal transformation with the chiral
memory effect
Chiral Memory in Dynamic Transformation from Porous Organic Cages to Covalent Organic Frameworks for Enantiorecognition Analysis
The preservation of chirality during a transformation
process,
known as the “chiral memory” effect, has garnered significant
attention across multiple research disciplines. Here, we first report
the retention of the original chiral structure during dynamic covalent
chemistry (DCC)-induced structural transformation from porous organic
cages into covalent organic frameworks (COFs). A total of six two-dimensional
chiral COFs constructed by entirely achiral building blocks were obtained
through the DCC-induced substitution of chiral linkers in a homochiral
cage (CC3-R or -S) using achiral
amine monomers. Homochirality of these COFs resulted from the construction
of 3-fold-symmetric benzene-1,3,5-methanimine cores with a propeller-like
configuration of one single-handedness throughout the cage-to-COF
transformation. The obtained chiral COFs can be further utilized as
fluorescence sensors or chiral stationary phases for gas chromatography
with high enantioselectivity. The present study thus highlighted the
great potential to expand the scope of functional chiral materials
via DCC-induced crystal-to-crystal transformation with the chiral
memory effect
Chiral Memory in Dynamic Transformation from Porous Organic Cages to Covalent Organic Frameworks for Enantiorecognition Analysis
The preservation of chirality during a transformation
process,
known as the “chiral memory” effect, has garnered significant
attention across multiple research disciplines. Here, we first report
the retention of the original chiral structure during dynamic covalent
chemistry (DCC)-induced structural transformation from porous organic
cages into covalent organic frameworks (COFs). A total of six two-dimensional
chiral COFs constructed by entirely achiral building blocks were obtained
through the DCC-induced substitution of chiral linkers in a homochiral
cage (CC3-R or -S) using achiral
amine monomers. Homochirality of these COFs resulted from the construction
of 3-fold-symmetric benzene-1,3,5-methanimine cores with a propeller-like
configuration of one single-handedness throughout the cage-to-COF
transformation. The obtained chiral COFs can be further utilized as
fluorescence sensors or chiral stationary phases for gas chromatography
with high enantioselectivity. The present study thus highlighted the
great potential to expand the scope of functional chiral materials
via DCC-induced crystal-to-crystal transformation with the chiral
memory effect
Chiral Memory in Dynamic Transformation from Porous Organic Cages to Covalent Organic Frameworks for Enantiorecognition Analysis
The preservation of chirality during a transformation
process,
known as the “chiral memory” effect, has garnered significant
attention across multiple research disciplines. Here, we first report
the retention of the original chiral structure during dynamic covalent
chemistry (DCC)-induced structural transformation from porous organic
cages into covalent organic frameworks (COFs). A total of six two-dimensional
chiral COFs constructed by entirely achiral building blocks were obtained
through the DCC-induced substitution of chiral linkers in a homochiral
cage (CC3-R or -S) using achiral
amine monomers. Homochirality of these COFs resulted from the construction
of 3-fold-symmetric benzene-1,3,5-methanimine cores with a propeller-like
configuration of one single-handedness throughout the cage-to-COF
transformation. The obtained chiral COFs can be further utilized as
fluorescence sensors or chiral stationary phases for gas chromatography
with high enantioselectivity. The present study thus highlighted the
great potential to expand the scope of functional chiral materials
via DCC-induced crystal-to-crystal transformation with the chiral
memory effect
Chiral Memory in Dynamic Transformation from Porous Organic Cages to Covalent Organic Frameworks for Enantiorecognition Analysis
The preservation of chirality during a transformation
process,
known as the “chiral memory” effect, has garnered significant
attention across multiple research disciplines. Here, we first report
the retention of the original chiral structure during dynamic covalent
chemistry (DCC)-induced structural transformation from porous organic
cages into covalent organic frameworks (COFs). A total of six two-dimensional
chiral COFs constructed by entirely achiral building blocks were obtained
through the DCC-induced substitution of chiral linkers in a homochiral
cage (CC3-R or -S) using achiral
amine monomers. Homochirality of these COFs resulted from the construction
of 3-fold-symmetric benzene-1,3,5-methanimine cores with a propeller-like
configuration of one single-handedness throughout the cage-to-COF
transformation. The obtained chiral COFs can be further utilized as
fluorescence sensors or chiral stationary phases for gas chromatography
with high enantioselectivity. The present study thus highlighted the
great potential to expand the scope of functional chiral materials
via DCC-induced crystal-to-crystal transformation with the chiral
memory effect
Chiral Memory in Dynamic Transformation from Porous Organic Cages to Covalent Organic Frameworks for Enantiorecognition Analysis
The preservation of chirality during a transformation
process,
known as the “chiral memory” effect, has garnered significant
attention across multiple research disciplines. Here, we first report
the retention of the original chiral structure during dynamic covalent
chemistry (DCC)-induced structural transformation from porous organic
cages into covalent organic frameworks (COFs). A total of six two-dimensional
chiral COFs constructed by entirely achiral building blocks were obtained
through the DCC-induced substitution of chiral linkers in a homochiral
cage (CC3-R or -S) using achiral
amine monomers. Homochirality of these COFs resulted from the construction
of 3-fold-symmetric benzene-1,3,5-methanimine cores with a propeller-like
configuration of one single-handedness throughout the cage-to-COF
transformation. The obtained chiral COFs can be further utilized as
fluorescence sensors or chiral stationary phases for gas chromatography
with high enantioselectivity. The present study thus highlighted the
great potential to expand the scope of functional chiral materials
via DCC-induced crystal-to-crystal transformation with the chiral
memory effect
Chiral Memory in Dynamic Transformation from Porous Organic Cages to Covalent Organic Frameworks for Enantiorecognition Analysis
The preservation of chirality during a transformation
process,
known as the “chiral memory” effect, has garnered significant
attention across multiple research disciplines. Here, we first report
the retention of the original chiral structure during dynamic covalent
chemistry (DCC)-induced structural transformation from porous organic
cages into covalent organic frameworks (COFs). A total of six two-dimensional
chiral COFs constructed by entirely achiral building blocks were obtained
through the DCC-induced substitution of chiral linkers in a homochiral
cage (CC3-R or -S) using achiral
amine monomers. Homochirality of these COFs resulted from the construction
of 3-fold-symmetric benzene-1,3,5-methanimine cores with a propeller-like
configuration of one single-handedness throughout the cage-to-COF
transformation. The obtained chiral COFs can be further utilized as
fluorescence sensors or chiral stationary phases for gas chromatography
with high enantioselectivity. The present study thus highlighted the
great potential to expand the scope of functional chiral materials
via DCC-induced crystal-to-crystal transformation with the chiral
memory effect
Novel Inorganic Mesoporous Material with Chiral Nematic Structure Derived from Nanocrystalline Cellulose for High-Resolution Gas Chromatographic Separations
Chiral nematic mesoporous silica
(CNMS) has attracted widespread
attention due to some unique features, such as its nematic structure,
chirality, large pore size, high temperature resistance, low cost,
and ease of preparation. We first reported the use of CNMS as a stationary
phase for capillary gas chromatography (GC). The CNMS-coated capillary
column not only gives good selectivity for the separation of linear
alkanes, aromatic hydrocarbons, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs),
and isomers but also offers excellent enantioselectivity for chiral
compounds. Compared with enantioseparations on commercial β-DEX
120 and Chirasil-l-Val columns, a CNMS-coated capillary column
offers excellent enantioselectivity, chiral recognition complementarity,
and the separation of analytes within short elution times. It can
also be potentially applied in high-temperature GC at more than 350
°C. This work indicates that CNMS could soon become very attractive
for separations
Homochiral Porous Organic Cage with High Selectivity for the Separation of Racemates in Gas Chromatography
Porous organic molecular cages as
a new type of porous materials
have attracted a tremendous attention for their potential applications
in recent years. Here we report the use of a homochiral porous organic
cage (POC) (CC3-R) diluted with a polysiloxane (OV-1701) as a stationary
phase for high-resolution gas chromatography (GC) with excellent enantioselectivity.
A large number of optical isomers have been resolved without derivatization,
including chiral alcohols, diols, amines, alcohol amines, esters,
ketones, ethers, halohydrocarbons, organic acids, amino acid methyl
esters, and sulfoxides. Compared with commercial β-DEX 120 and
Chirasil-L-Val columns, the CC3-R coated capillary column offered
more preeminent enantioselectivity. In addition, CC3-R also exhibits
good selectivity for the separation of isomers, linear alkanes, alcohols,
and aromatic hydrocarbons. The excellent resolution ability, repeatability,
and thermal stability make CC3-R a promising candidate as a novel
stationary phase for GC. The study described herein first proves useful
commercially. This work also indicates that porous organic molecular
materials will become more attractive in separation science