4.8 Article

Selective Monofunctionalization Enabled by Reaction-History- Dependent Communication in Catalytic Rotaxanes

Journal

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION
Volume 59, Issue 38, Pages 16668-16674

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/anie.202006305

Keywords

information transfer; organocatalysis; rotaxanes; stopper exchange; supramolecular chemistry

Funding

  1. University of Vermont
  2. U.S. Army Research Office [71015]
  3. ACS Petroleum Research Fund Grant [58219-DNI6]
  4. National Institutues of Health [S10-OD018126, P30-GM118228]
  5. NVIDIA GPU Grant Seed Program

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Selective monofunctionalization of substrates with distant, yet equally reactive functional groups is difficult to achieve, as it requires the second functional group to selectively modulate its reactivity once the first functional group has reacted. We now show that mechanically interlocked catalytic rings can effectively regulate the reactivity of stoppering groups in rotaxanes over a distance of about 2 nm. Our mechanism of communication is enabled by a unique interlocked design, which effectively removes the catalytic rings from the substrates by fast dethreading as soon as the first reaction has taken place. Our method not only led to a rare example of selective monofunctionalization, but also to a molecular if function. Overall, the study presents a way to get distant functional groups to communicate with each other in a reaction-history-dependent manner by creating linkers that can ultimately perform logical operations at the molecular level.

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