chemical fuel

Time Programmable Locking/Unlocking of the Calix[4]arene Scaffold by Means of Chemical Fuels

In this work, we report that 2-cyano-2-phenylpropanoic acid and its p-Cl, p-CH3 and p-OCH3 derivatives can be used as chemical fuels to control the geometry of the calix[4]arene scaffold in its cone conformation. It is shown that, under the action of the fuel, the cone calix[4]arene platform assumes a “locked” shape with two opposite aromatic rings strongly convergent and the other two strongly divergent (“pinched cone” conformation). Only when the fuel is exhausted, the cone calix[4]arene scaffold returns to its resting, “unlocked” shape.

The hydrolysis of the anhydride of 2-cyano-2-phenylpropanoic acid triggers the repeated back and forth motions of an acid–base operated molecular switch

This work aimed to render phenomenologically autonomous the otherwise stepwise operation of a catenane-based molecular switch, which is chemically triggered by the decarboxylation of 2-cyano-2-phenylpropanoic acid (2). Given that any amount of 2 in stoichiometric excess with respect to the catenane is consumed in a side reaction, the authors resorted to the corresponding anhydride 5, the slow hydrolysis of which, due to adventitious water in dichloromethane, continuously produces in situ the actual fuel 2.

Controlling the liberation rate of the in situ release of a chemical fuel for the operationally autonomous motions of molecular machines

Second-order rate constants of the aminolysis of 2-cyano-2-phenylpropanoic anhydride 3 by a series of N-methylanilines differently substituted in the aromatic moiety (4a-d) were measured in dichloromethane. The common reaction product of aminolysis is 2-cyano-2-phenylpropanoic acid 1, which is known to be an effective fuel for acid-base driven molecular machines, but cannot be used in molar excess with respect to the machine.

2-Cyano-2-phenylpropanoic acid triggers the back and forth motions of an acid-base-operated paramagnetic molecular switch

The back and forth motions of a crown-ether based wheel along the axis of a bistable rotaxane are triggered by the decarboxylation of 2-cyano-2-phenylpropanoic acid and detected by the oscillation of the EPR nitrogen splitting of a dialkyl nitroxide function mounted within the macrocyclic ring. When the p-Cl derivative of the acid is used, back and forth motions are accelerated. Conversely, with p-CH3 and p-OCH3 derivatives, the back motion is strongly inhibited by the insurgence of collateral radical reactions.

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