147 research outputs found

    Mechanical chirality: a chiral catalyst with a ring to it

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    A chiral [2]rotaxane in which the asymmetry is derived from the way in which the two components are mechanically interlocked ā€” rather than being encoded in the covalent connectivity of the components themselves ā€” has been shown to act as an enantioselective organocatalyst

    A co-conformationally "topologically" chiral catenane

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    [Image: see text] Catenanes composed of two achiral rings that are oriented (C(nh) symmetry) because of the sequence of atoms they contain are referred to as topologically chiral. Here, we present the synthesis of a highly enantioenriched catenane containing a related but overlooked ā€œco-conformationally ā€˜topologicallyā€™ chiralā€ stereogenic unit, which arises when a bilaterally symmetric C(nv) ring is desymmetrized by the position of an oriented macrocycle

    Anionā€Ļ€ catalysis enabled by the mechanical bond

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    We report a series of rotaxane-based anionā€“Ļ€ catalysts in which the mechanical bond between a bipyridine macrocycle and an axle containing an NDI unit is intrinsic to the activity observed, including a [3]rotaxane that catalyses an otherwise disfavoured Michael addition in >60 fold selectivity over a competing decarboxylation pathway that dominates under BrĆønsted base conditions. The results are rationalized by detailed experimental investigations, electrochemical and computational analysis

    An autonomous chemically fuelled small-molecule motor

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    Molecular machines are among the most complex of all functional molecules and lie at the heart of nearly every biological process. A number of synthetic small-molecule machines have been developed, including molecular muscles, synthesizers, pumps, walkers, transporters and light-driven and electrically driven rotary motors. However, although biological molecular motors are powered by chemical gradients or the hydrolysis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), so far there are no synthetic small-molecule motors that can operate autonomously using chemical energy (that is, the components move with net directionality as long as a chemical fuel is present). Here we describe a system in which a small molecular ring (macrocycle) is continuously transported directionally around a cyclic molecular track when powered by irreversible reactions of a chemical fuel, 9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl chloride. Key to the design is that the rate of reaction of this fuel with reactive sites on the cyclic track is faster when the macrocycle is far from the reactive site than when it is near to it. We find that a bulky pyridine-based catalyst promotes carbonate-forming reactions that ratchet the displacement of the macrocycle away from the reactive sites on the track. Under reaction conditions where both attachment and cleavage of the 9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl groups occur through different processes, and the cleavage reaction occurs at a rate independent of macrocycle location, net directional rotation of the molecular motor continues for as long as unreacted fuel remains. We anticipate that autonomous chemically fuelled molecular motors will find application as engines in molecular nanotechnology.</p

    An efficient approach to mechanically planar chiral rotaxanes

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    We describe the first method for production of mechanically planar chiral rotaxanes in excellent enantiopurity without the use of chiral separation techniques and, for the first time, unambiguously assign the absolute stereochemistry of the products. This proof-of-concept study, which employs a chiral pool sugar as the source of asymmetry and a high-yielding active template reaction for mechanical bond formation, finally opens the door to detailed investigation of these challenging target

    Chemical consequences of mechanical bonding in catenanes and rotaxanes: isomerism, modification, catalysis and molecular machines for synthesis

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    Research on mechanically interlocked molecules has advanced substantially over the last five decades. A large proportion of the published work focusses on the synthesis of these challenging targets, and the subsequent control of the relative position of the covalent sub-components, to generate novel molecular devices and machines. In this Feature Article we instead review some of the less discussed consequences of mechanical bonding for the chemical behaviour of catenanes and rotaxanes, and their application in synthesis, including striking recent examples of molecular machines which carry out complex synthetic task

    Data set for: A Co-conformationally &ldquo;Topologically&rdquo; Chiral Catenane

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    This dataset supports the publication: A Co-conformationally &ldquo;Topologically&rdquo; Chiral Catenane AUTHORS: Arnau Rodr&iacute;guez-Rubio, Andrea Savoini, Florian Modicom, Patrick Butler, Stephen M. Goldup* TITLE: A Co-conformationally &ldquo;Topologically&rdquo; Chiral Catenane JOURNAL: Journal of the American Chemical Society This dataset contains: Characterisation data (NMR, MS, x-ray) for all the compounds reported in the manuscript </span
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