Diastereoselective Self‐Assembly of Low‐Symmetry PdnL2n Nanocages through Coordination‐Sphere Engineering

Paulina Molinska, Andrew Tarzia, Louise Male, Kim E. Jelfs, James E. M. Lewis*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Metal‐organic cages (MOCs) are popular host architectures assembled from ligands and metal ions/nodes. Assembling structurally complex, low‐symmetry MOCs with anisotropic cavities can be limited by the formation of statistical isomer libraries. We set out to investigate the use of primary coordination‐sphere engineering (CSE) to bias isomer selectivity within homo‐ and heteroleptic PdnL2n cages. Unexpected differences in selectivities between alternative donor groups led us to recognise the significant impact of the second coordination sphere on isomer stabilities. From this, molecular‐level insight into the origins of selectivity between cis and trans diastereoisomers was gained, highlighting the importance of both host–guest and host‐solvent interactions, in addition to ligand design. This detailed understanding allows precision engineering of low‐symmetry MOC assemblies without wholesale redesign of the ligand framework, and fundamentally provides a theoretical scaffold for the development of stimuli‐responsive, shape‐shifting MOCs.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202315451
Number of pages9
JournalAngewandte Chemie (International Edition)
Volume62
Issue number51
Early online date27 Oct 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Dec 2023

Keywords

  • Self-Assembly
  • Low-Symmetry
  • Coordination-Sphere
  • Metallosupramolecular Chemistry
  • Coordination Cages

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