6533b872fe1ef96bd12d439f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Tri- and tetraurea piperazine cyclophanes: synthesis and complexation studies of preorganized and folded receptor molecules.

Kari RaatikainenKari RissanenN. Kodiah Beyeh

subject

chemistry.chemical_classificationStereochemistryHydrogen bondOrganic ChemistryIodideSupramolecular chemistryGeneral ChemistryNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyCatalysisCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundPiperazinechemistryIntramolecular forceMoleculeCyclophane

description

A series of symmetrical tri- and tetrameric N-ethyl- and N-phenylurea-functionalized cyclophanes have been prepared in nearly quantitative yields (86-99 %) from the corresponding tri- and tetraamino-functionalized piperazine cyclophanes and ethyl or phenyl isocyanates. Their conformational and complexation properties have been studied by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, variable-temperature NMR spectroscopy, and ESI-MS analysis. The rigid 27-membered trimeric cyclophane skeleton assisted by a seam of intramolecular hydrogen bonds results in a preorganized ditopic recognition site with an all-syn conformation of the urea moieties that, complemented by a lipophilic cavity of the cyclophane, binds molecular and ionic guests as well as ion pairs. The all-syn conformation persists in acidic conditions and the triprotonated triurea cyclophane binds an unprecedented anion pair, H(2)PO(4)(-)⋅⋅⋅HPO(4)(2-), in the solid state. The tetra-N-ethylurea cyclophane is less rigid and demonstrates an induced-fit recognition of diisopropyl ether in the solid state. The guest was encapsulated within the lipophilic interior of a quasicapsule, formed by intramolecular hydrogen-bond-driven folding of the 36-membered cyclophane skeleton. In the gas phase, the essential role of the urea moieties in the binding was demonstrated by the formation of monomeric 1:1 complexes with K(+), TMA(+), and TMP(+) as well as the ion-pair complexes [KI+K](+), [TMABr+TMA](+) and [TMPBr+TMP](+). In the positive-mode ESI-MS analysis, ion-pair binding was found to be more pronounced with the larger tetraurea cyclophanes. In the negative mode, owing to the large size of the binding site, a general binding preference towards larger anions, such as the iodide, over smaller anions, such as the fluoride, was observed.

10.1002/chem.201001695https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21077059