4.7 Article

Encapsulation of Aromatic Guests in the Bisporphyrin Cavity of a Double-Stranded Spiroborate Helicate: Thermodynamic and Kinetic Studies and the Encapsulation Mechanism

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 86, Issue 15, Pages 10501-10516

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.joc.1c01155

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Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [18H05209]

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This study systematically investigated the factors influencing the formation of inclusion complexes within a bisporphyrin, revealing that the size, electron density, and substituents of the aromatic guests all play a role. The ability of the helicate to encapsulate guests increased with larger core sizes but decreased with bulkier and more substituted guests. In addition, a new mechanism for the formation of inclusion complexes was discovered in specific naphthalenediimide derivatives.
A double-stranded spiroborate helicate bearing a bisporphyrin unit in the middle forms an inclusion complex with electron-deficient aromatic guests that are sandwiched between the porphyrins. In the present study, we systematically investigated the effects of size, electron density, and substituents of a series of aromatic guests on inclusion complex formations within the bisporphyrin. The thermodynamic and kinetic behaviors during the guest-encapsulation process were also investigated in detail. The guest-encapsulation abilities in the helicate increased with the increasing core sizes of the electron-deficient aromatic guests and decreased with the increasing bulkiness and number of substituents of the guests. Among the naphthalenediimide derivatives, those with bulky N-substituents at both ends hardly formed an inclusion complex. Instead, they formed a [2]rotaxane-like inclusion complex through the water-mediated dynamic B-O bond cleavage/reformation of the spiroborate groups of the helicate, which enhanced the conformational flexibility of the helicate to enlarge the bisporphyrin cavity and form an inclusion complex. Based on the X-ray crystal structure of a unique pacman-like 1:1 inclusion complex between the helicate and an ammonium cation as well as the molecular dynamics simulation results, a plausible mechanism for the inclusion of a planar aromatic guest within the helicate is also proposed.

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