Selective Photodimerization in a Cyclodextrin Metal–Organic Framework
Author(s) -
XiaoYang Chen,
Haoyuan Chen,
Luka Đorđević∞,
QingHui Guo,
Huang Wu,
Yu Wang,
Long Zhang,
Yang Jiao,
Kang Cai,
Hongliang Chen,
Charlotte L. Stern,
Samuel I. Stupp,
Randall Q. Snurr,
Dengke Shen,
J. Fraser Stoddart
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.1c03277
Subject(s) - chemistry , cyclodextrin , enantiomer , molecule , hydrogen bond , cycloaddition , substrate (aquarium) , structural isomer , metal , covalent bond , enantioselective synthesis , crystallography , stereochemistry , combinatorial chemistry , organic chemistry , catalysis , oceanography , geology
For the most part, enzymes contain one active site wherein they catalyze in a serial manner chemical reactions between substrates both efficiently and rapidly. Imagine if a situation could be created within a chiral porous crystal containing trillions of active sites where substrates can reside in vast numbers before being converted in parallel into products. Here, we report how it is possible to incorporate 1-anthracenecarboxylate ( 1-AC - ) as a substrate into a γ-cyclodextrin-containing metal-organic framework ( CD-MOF-1 ), where the metals are K + cations, prior to carrying out [4+4] photodimerizations between pairs of substrate molecules, affording selectively one of four possible regioisomers. One of the high-yielding regioisomers exhibits optical activity as a result of the presence of an 8:1 ratio of the two enantiomers following separation by high-performance liquid chromatography. The solid-state superstructure of 1-anthracenecarboxylate potassium salt ( 1-ACK ), which is co-crystallized with γ-cyclodextrin, reveals that pairs of substrate molecules are not only packed inside tunnels between spherical cavities present in CD-MOF-1 , but also stabilized-in addition to hydrogen-bonding to the C-2 and C-3 hydroxyl groups on the d-glucopyranosyl residues present in the γ-cyclodextrin tori-by combinations of hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions between the carboxyl groups in 1-AC - and four K + cations on the waistline between the two γ-cyclodextrin tori in the tunnels. These non-covalent bonding interactions result in preferred co-conformations that account for the highly regio- and enantioselective [4+4] cycloaddition during photoirradiation. Theoretical calculations, in conjunction with crystallography, support the regio- and stereochemical outcome of the photodimerization.
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