1. Highly stable tetrathiafulvalene radical dimers in [3]catenanes
- Author
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Sanjeev K. Dey, J. Fraser Stoddart, Ali Coskun, Mark A. Olson, William A. Goddard, Ali Trabolsi, Walter F. Paxton, Georgina M. Rosair, Stuart T. Caldwell, Gokhan Barin, Diego Benitez, Ekaterina Tkatchouk, Florence Duclairoir, Amy A. Sarjeant, Jennifer L. Seymour, Ross S. Forgan, Graeme Cooke, Shanika Gunatilaka Hewage, Michael R. Wasielewski, Albert C. Fahrenbach, Douglas C. Friedman, Raanan Carmielli, Michael T. Colvin, Jason M. Spruell, and Alexandra M. Z. Slawin more...
- Subjects
Valence (chemistry) ,Stereochemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Catenane ,Catenanes ,Supramolecular chemistry ,Viologen ,General Chemistry ,Umpolung ,Paramagnetism ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Crystallography ,Electron transfer ,chemistry ,medicine ,Dimerization ,Tetrathiafulvalene ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Two [3]catenane ‘molecular flasks’ have been designed to create stabilized, redox-controlled tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) dimers, enabling their spectrophotometric and structural properties to be probed in detail. The mechanically interlocked framework of the [3]catenanes creates the ideal arrangement and ultrahigh local concentration for the encircled TTF units to form stable dimers associated with their discrete oxidation states. These dimerization events represent an affinity umpolung, wherein the inversion in electronic affinity replaces the traditional TTF-bipyridinium interaction, which is over-ridden by stabilizing mixed-valence (TTF)_(2)^(•+) and radical-cation (TTF^(•+))_2 states inside the ‘molecular flasks.’ The experimental data, collected in the solid state as well as in solution under ambient conditions, together with supporting quantum mechanical calculations, are consistent with the formation of stabilized paramagnetic mixed-valence dimers, and then diamagnetic radical-cation dimers following subsequent one-electron oxidations of the [3]catenanes. more...
- Published
- 2010
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