4.6 Article

Self-Assembled Arene-Ruthenium-Based Rectangles for the Selective Sensing of Multi-Carboxylate Anions

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 17, Issue 28, Pages 7837-7844

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.201100242

Keywords

amides; carboxylates; ruthenium; self-assembly; sensors

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Science and Technology [R33-2008-000-10003, 2009-0093818]
  2. NIH [GM-57052]

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Novel arene-ruthenium [2+2] metalla-rectangles 4 and 5 have been synthesized by self-assembly using dipyridyl amide ligand 3 and arene-ruthenium acceptors (arene: benzoquinone (1), naphthacenedione (2)) and characterized by NMR spectroscopy and ESI-MS. The solid-state structure of 5 was determined by X-ray diffraction and shows encapsulated diethyl ether molecule in the rectangular cavity of 5. The luminescent 5 was further used for anion sensing with the amidic linkage serving as a hydrogen-bond donor site for anions and the ruthenium moiety serving as a signaling unit. A UV/Vis titration study demonstrated that although 5 interacts very weakly with common monoanions as well as with flexible dicarboxylate anions such as malonate and succinate, it displays significant binding affinity (K > 10(3) in MeOH) for rigid multi-carboxylate anions such as oxalate, citrate, and tartrate, exhibiting a 1: 1 stoichiometry. It has been suggested that 1: 1 bidentate hydrogen bonding assisted by appropriate geometrical complementarity is mainly responsible for the increased affinity of 5 towards such anions. A fluorescence titration study revealed a large fluorescence enhancement of 5 upon binding to multi-carboxylate anions, which can be attributed to the blocking of the photoinduced electron-transfer process from the arene-Ru moiety to the amidic donor in 5 as a result of hydrogen bonding between the donor and the anion.

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