Induction of Motion in a Synthetic Molecular Machine: Effect of Tuning the Driving Force

Authors
  • M. Marcaccio
  • F. Paolucci
  • E.R. Kay
  • D.A. Leigh
  • A.M. Brouwer ORCID logo
Publication date 2013
Journal Chemistry - A European Journal
Volume | Issue number 19 | 18
Pages (from-to) 5566-5577
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Van 't Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences (HIMS)
Abstract
Rotaxane molecular shuttles were studied in which a tetralactam macrocyclic ring moves between a succinamide station and a second station in which the structure is varied. Station2 in all cases is an aromatic imide, which is a poor hydrogen-bond acceptor in the neutral form, but a strong one when reduced with one or two electrons. When the charge density on the hydrogen-bond-accepting carbonyl groups in station2 is reduced by changing a naphthalimide into a naphthalene diimide radical anion, the shuttling rate changes only slightly. When station2 is a pyromellitimide radical anion, however, the shuttling rate is significantly reduced. This implies that the shuttling rate is not only determined by the initial unbinding of the ring from the first station, as previously supposed. An alternative reaction mechanism is proposed in which the ring binds to both stations in the transition state.
Document type Article
Note With supporting information
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201204016
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