Literature DB >> 31778308

The Green Box: An Electronically Versatile Perylene Diimide Macrocyclic Host for Fullerenes.

Timothy A Barendt1, William K Myers2, Stuart P Cornes3, Maria A Lebedeva1,3, Kyriakos Porfyrakis3, Igor Marques4, Vítor Félix4, Paul D Beer1.   

Abstract

The powerful electron accepting ability of fullerenes makes them ubiquitous components in biomimetic donor-acceptor systems that model the intermolecular electron transfer processes of Nature's photosynthetic center. Exploiting perylene diimides (PDIs) as components in cyclic host systems for the noncovalent recognition of fullerenes is unprecedented, in part because archetypal PDIs are also electron deficient, making dyad assembly formation electronically unfavorable. To address this, we report the strategic design and synthesis of a novel large, macrocyclic receptor composed of two covalently strapped electron-rich bis-pyrrolidine PDI panels, nicknamed the "Green Box" due to its color. Through the principle of electronic complementarity, the Green Box exhibits strong recognition of pristine fullerenes (C60/70), with the noncovalent ground and excited state interactions that occur upon fullerene guest encapsulation characterized by a range of techniques including electronic absorption, fluorescence emission, NMR and time-resolved EPR spectroscopies, cyclic voltammetry, mass spectrometry, and DFT calculations. While relatively low polarity solvents result in partial charge transfer in the host donor-guest acceptor complex, increasing the polarity of the solvent medium facilitates rare, thermally allowed full electron transfer from the Green Box to fullerene in the ground state. The ensuing charge separated radical ion paired complex is spectroscopically characterized, with thermodynamic reversibility and kinetic stability also demonstrated. Importantly, the Green Box represents a seminal type of C60/70 host where electron-rich PDI motifs are utilized as recognition motifs for fullerenes, facilitating novel intermolecular, solvent tunable ground state electronic communication with these guests. The ability to switch between extremes of the charge transfer energy continuum is without precedent in synthetic fullerene-based dyads.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31778308     DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b10929

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  5 in total

1.  Gram-scale synthesis of a covalent nanocage that preserves the redox properties of encapsulated fullerenes.

Authors:  Daniel A Rothschild; William P Kopcha; Aaron Tran; Jianyuan Zhang; Mark C Lipke
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2022-04-13       Impact factor: 9.969

2.  Diastereoselective formation of homochiral flexible perylene bisimide cyclophanes and their hybrids with fullerenes.

Authors:  Iris Solymosi; Swathi Krishna; Edurne Nuin; Harald Maid; Barbara Scholz; Dirk M Guldi; M Eugenia Pérez-Ojeda; Andreas Hirsch
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2021-10-08       Impact factor: 9.825

3.  Subphthalocyanine capsules: molecular reactors for photoredox transformations of fullerenes.

Authors:  Marta Moreno-Simoni; Tomás Torres; Gema de la Torre
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2022-07-19       Impact factor: 9.969

4.  Molecular Tweezer Based on Perylene and Crown Ether for Selective Recognition of Fullerenes.

Authors:  Ke Luan; Qiao-Fen Lin; Fang-Fang Xie; Yu Wang; Yun-Fei Li; Lu Wang; Lin-Long Deng; Su-Yuan Xie; Lan-Sun Zheng
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2022-08-24

5.  Intramolecular Energy and Solvent-Dependent Chirality Transfer within a BINOL-Perylene Hetero-Cyclophane.

Authors:  Guanghui Ouyang; Jessica Rühe; Yang Zhang; Mei-Jin Lin; Minghua Liu; Frank Würthner
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2022-06-21       Impact factor: 16.823

  5 in total

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