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Effects of Electrostatic and π—π Interactions on the Stabilities of Xanthene Dye—4,4′‐Bipyridinium Complexes: Structural Design of a Geared Supramolecular Machine
Author(s) -
Willner Itamar,
Eichen Yoav,
Doron Amihood,
Marx Sharon
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
israel journal of chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.908
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1869-5868
pISSN - 0021-2148
DOI - 10.1002/ijch.199200008
Subject(s) - chemistry , xanthene , eosin y , supramolecular chemistry , moiety , eosin , diad , photochemistry , crystallography , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , crystal structure , medicine , staining , polymer , pathology , photocatalysis , copolymer , catalysis
Xanthene dyes and substituted 4,4′‐bipyridinium salts form well defined 1:1 complexes in solution and in the crystalline state. Electrostatic, charge‐transfer, and π‐π interactions are the driving forces for the formation of these complexes. Electrostatic interactions contribute 1.1–1.3 kcal/mol per ion pair, and interring interactions, i.e., charge transfer and π‐π interactions, contribute 6.2–6.3 kcal mol −1 to the complexes' stabilization. Application of a bis‐bipyridinium host results in enhanced binding of eosin Y, 1 , due to increased π‐π and donor‐acceptor interactions and complementary electrostatic attractions. The binding properties of the bipyridinium moiety to eosin Y is controlled by its functionalization with a photochromic azobenzene unit. The association constants of 8 ‐ trans and 8 ‐ cis to eosin Y, 1 , are 3000 M −1 and 38000 M −1 , respectively. This difference in the association constants of the diad isomers to 1 allows the photo‐controlled reversibly‐geared association and dissociation of the diad to and from eosin Y in the supramolecular assembly.