Published in

Wiley, Chemistry - A European Journal, 24(20), p. 7334-7344, 2014

DOI: 10.1002/chem.201400069

Links

Tools

Export citation

Search in Google Scholar

Radical-Cation Dimerization Overwhelms Inclusion in [n]Pseudorotaxanes

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

Full text: Download

Green circle
Preprint: archiving allowed
Orange circle
Postprint: archiving restricted
Red circle
Published version: archiving forbidden
Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Suppression of the dimerization of the viologen radical cation by cucurbit[7]uril (CB7) in water is a well-known phenomenon. Herein, two counter-examples are presented. Two viologen-containing thread molecules were designed, synthesized, and thoroughly characterized by 1H DOSY NMR spectrometry, UV/Vis absorption spectrophotometry, square-wave voltammetry, and chronocoulometry: BV4+, which contains two viologen subunits, and HV12+, which contains six. In both threads, the viologen subunits are covalently bonded to a hexavalent phosphazene core. The corresponding [3]- and [7]pseudorotaxanes that form on complexation with CB7, that is, BV4+⊂(CB7)2 and HV12+⊂(CB7)6, were also analyzed. The properties of two monomeric control threads, namely, methyl viologen (MV2+) and benzyl methyl viologen (BMV2+), as well as their [2]pseudorotaxane complexes with CB7 (MV2+⊂CB7 and BMV2+⊂CB7) were also investigated. As expected, the control pseudorotaxanes remained intact after one-electron reduction of their viologen-recognition stations. In contrast, analogous reduction of BV4+⊂(CB7)2 and HV12+⊂(CB7)6 led to host–guest decomplexation and release of the free threads BV2(.+) and HV6(.+), respectively. 1H DOSY NMR spectrometric and chronocoulometric measurements showed that BV2(.+) and HV6(.+) have larger diffusion coefficients than the corresponding [3]- and [7]pseudorotaxanes, and UV/Vis absorption studies provided evidence for intramolecular radical-cation dimerization. These results demonstrate that radical-cation dimerization, a relatively weak interaction, can be used as a driving force in novel molecular switches.