| Literature DB >> 29044811 |
Shumpei Kai1, Vicente Martí-Centelles2, Yui Sakuma3, Takako Mashiko3, Tatsuo Kojima1, Umpei Nagashima4, Masanori Tachikawa3, Paul J Lusby2, Shuichi Hiraoka1.
Abstract
The self-assembly process of a Pd2 L4 cage complex consisting of rigid ditopic ligands, in which two 3-pyridyl groups are connected to a benzene ring through acetylene bonds and PdII ions was revealed by a recently developed quantitative analysis of self-assembly process (QASAP), with which the self-assembly process of coordination assemblies can be investigated by monitoring the evolution with time of the average composition of all the intermediates. QASAP revealed that the rate-determining steps of the cage formation are the intramolecular ligand exchanges in the final stage of the self-assembly: [Pd2 L4 Py*2 ]4+ →[Pd2 L4 Py*1 ]4+ +Py* and [Pd2 L4 Py*1 ]4+ →[Pd2 L4 ]4+ +Py* (Py*: 3-chloropyridine, which was used as a leaving ligand on the metal source). The energy barriers for the two reactions were determined to be 22.3 and 21.9 kcal mol-1 , respectively. DFT calculations of the transition-state (TS) structures for the two steps indicated that the distortion of the trigonal-bipyramidal PdII center at the TS geometries increases the activation free energy of the two steps.Entities:
Keywords: cage compounds; palladium; reaction mechanisms; self-assembly; supramolecular chemistry
Year: 2017 PMID: 29044811 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201704285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236