3 research outputs found
Manipulating the Diastereoselectivity of Ortholithiation in Planar Chiral Ferrocenes
The sense of asymmetric ortholithiation directed by a chiral oxazoline may be inverted simply by the choice of achiral ligand. Comparison of results with a number of ferrocenyl oxazoline derivatives suggests that lithiation takes place by coordination to the oxazoline nitrogen irrespective of the ligand used
Tunable Anisotropic Thermal Expansion of a Porous Zinc(II) Metal–Organic Framework
A novel three-dimensional metal–organic
framework (MOF)
that displays anisotropic thermal expansion has been prepared and
characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SCD) and thermal
analysis. The as-prepared MOF has one-dimensional channels containing
guest molecules that can be removed and/or exchanged for other guest
molecules in a single-crystal to single-crystal fashion. When the
original guest molecules are replaced there is a noticeable effect
on the host mechanics, altering the thermal expansion properties of
the material. This study of the thermal expansion coefficients of
different inclusion complexes of the host MOF involved systematic
alteration of guest size, i.e., methanol, ethanol, <i>n</i>-propanol, and isopropanol, showing that fine control over the thermal
expansion coefficients can be achieved and that the coefficients can
be correlated with the size of the guest. As a proof of concept, this
study demonstrates the realizable principle that a single-crystal
material with an exchangeable guest component (as opposed to a composite)
may be used to achieve a tunable thermal expansion coefficient. In
addition, this study demonstrates that greater variance in the absolute
dimensions of a crystal can be achieved when one has two variables
that affect it, i.e., the host–guest interactions and temperature
Tunable Anisotropic Thermal Expansion of a Porous Zinc(II) Metal–Organic Framework
A novel three-dimensional metal–organic
framework (MOF)
that displays anisotropic thermal expansion has been prepared and
characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SCD) and thermal
analysis. The as-prepared MOF has one-dimensional channels containing
guest molecules that can be removed and/or exchanged for other guest
molecules in a single-crystal to single-crystal fashion. When the
original guest molecules are replaced there is a noticeable effect
on the host mechanics, altering the thermal expansion properties of
the material. This study of the thermal expansion coefficients of
different inclusion complexes of the host MOF involved systematic
alteration of guest size, i.e., methanol, ethanol, <i>n</i>-propanol, and isopropanol, showing that fine control over the thermal
expansion coefficients can be achieved and that the coefficients can
be correlated with the size of the guest. As a proof of concept, this
study demonstrates the realizable principle that a single-crystal
material with an exchangeable guest component (as opposed to a composite)
may be used to achieve a tunable thermal expansion coefficient. In
addition, this study demonstrates that greater variance in the absolute
dimensions of a crystal can be achieved when one has two variables
that affect it, i.e., the host–guest interactions and temperature