Alkali cation-π interactions in aqueous systems, modulating supramolecular stereoisomerism of nanoscopic metal-organic capsules
Citation:
Paul Wix, Swetanshu Tandon, Sebastien Vaesen, Kadri Karimu, Jennifer S. Mathieson, Kane Esien, Solveig Felton, Graeme W. Watson & Wolfgang Schmitt, Alkali cation-π interactions in aqueous systems, modulating supramolecular stereoisomerism of nanoscopic metal-organic capsules, Nature Communications, 15, 2024, 10180-Abstract:
Contrary to common chemical intuition, cation-π interactions can persist in
polar, aqueous reaction solutions, rather than in dry non-coordinative solvent
systems. This account highlights how alkali ion-π interactions impart distinctive structure-influencing supramolecular forces that can be exploited in
the preparation of nanoscopic metal-organic capsules. The incorporation of
alkali ions from polar solutions into molecular pockets promotes the assembly
of otherwise inaccessible capsular entities whose structures are distinctive to
those of common polyoxovanadate clusters in which {V=O} moieties usually
point radially to the outside, shielding the molecular entities. The applied
concept is exemplified by homologous {V20} and {V30} cages, composed of
inverted, hemispherical {V5O9} units. The number and geometrical organization of these {V5O9} sub-units in these cages are associated with prevailing
cation-π interactions and competing steric effects. The stereoisomers of these
resulting nano-sized objects are comparable to Alfred Werner-type structural
isomers of simple mononuclear complexes in-line with fundamental coordination chemistry principles.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/schmittwDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Schmitt, Wolfgang
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Nature Communications;15;
Availability:
Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Nanoscience & Materials , Smart & Sustainable Planet , COMPLEXES , Crystal engineering , Inorganic Chemistry , MOLECULAR-STRUCTURE , Nanochemistry , Nanotechnology , New materials, supramolecular structures , Solid state chemistry , Spectroscopy , Synthesis and new moleculesDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54426-4Metadata
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