| Literature DB >> 30921499 |
Marion Kieffer1, Ana M Garcia2, Cally J E Haynes1, Slavko Kralj2,3, Daniel Iglesias2, Jonathan R Nitschke1, Silvia Marchesan2.
Abstract
An unreported d,l-tripeptide self-assembled into gels that embedded FeII 4 L4 metal-organic cages to form materials that were characterized by TEM, EDX, Raman spectroscopy, rheometry, UV/Vis and NMR spectroscopy, and circular dichroism. The cage type and concentration modulated gel viscoelasticity, and thus the diffusion rate of molecular guests through the nanostructured matrix, as gauged by 19 F and 1 H NMR spectroscopy. When two different cages were added to spatially separated gel layers, the gel-cage composite material enabled the spatial segregation of a mixture of guests that diffused into the gel. Each cage selectively encapsulated its preferred guest during diffusion. We thus present a new strategy for using nested supramolecular interactions to enable the separation of small molecules.Entities:
Keywords: chemical separation; host-guest systems; low-molecular-weight gelators; metal-organic cages; self-assembly
Year: 2019 PMID: 30921499 PMCID: PMC6563161 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201900429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336
Figure 1a) Self‐assembly of (p‐aminobenzoyl)‐l‐Phe‐D‐Ala‐l‐Phe‐NH2 into gel‐forming fibrils. b,c) Synthesis of cages 1 and 2 by subcomponent self‐assembly and encapsulation of ReO4 − or TFA− in 1 and FA in 2.
Figure 2a,b) Peptide and either cage 1 or 2 yield 1⊂Gel and 2⊂Gel, respectively. c,d) TEM images show the fibrils of the gels and EDX spectra (insets) show the presence of Fe from MOCs at 1 mm in 1⊂Gel (c) and 2⊂Gel (d). Scale bar=100 nm. e,f) Gelation kinetics depict G′ (dark blue and dark purple) and G′′ (light blue and light pink) for 1⊂Gel (e) and 2⊂Gel (f).
Figure 3a) ReO4 − uptake kinetics by 1 in solution (light‐blue diamonds) and by 1⊂Gel (dark‐blue dots) and diffusion of ReO4 − in 1⊂Gel (black circles). b) FA uptake kinetics by 2 in solution (pink diamonds) and by 2⊂Gel (purple dots) and diffusion of FA in 2⊂Gel (black circles). Dotted lines represent the asymptotic fitting from which the initial rates (k ini) were deduced.
Figure 4a) Photograph of the three‐layered gel and b) 2D mapping of the 1H NMR spectra for the three‐layered gel, showing the presence of MOC 1 in layer 1 (1⊂Gel), the peptide alone in the buffer gel layer, and MOC 2 in layer 2 (2⊂Gel). c) 19F NMR spectra of layer 1 (top, blue) and layer 2 (bottom, purple) showing, respectively, the decrease in the peak for encapsulated TFA− (▴) and the increase in both the encapsulated (▪) and free FA (•) over time after the addition of mixed FA and ReO4 − (1 equiv each).