A crystalline sponge based on dispersive forces suitable for X-ray structure determination of included molecular guests

A crystalline porous material showing one-dimensional (1-D) rectangular micropores (12 × 9 Å2) has been assembled from a semirigid macrocyclic tetraimine and EtOAc as the templating agent. The 1-D nature of the material is intrinsic to the conformationally rigid structure of a macrocyclic sub-unit bearing four cyclohexylidene residues. The multiple dispersive forces established among the aliphatic residues glutted the 1-D channels and provided thermal stability to the material at temperatures below 160 °C. Upon removal of the template, the structure of the empty solid exhibited permanent microporosity (SBET = 342 m2 g−1). Being a true molecular sponge, the channel framework of this material allowed the inclusion of a variety of molecular sample guests without compromising its crystalline nature. Remarkably, this crystalline material enabled the structure determination by X-ray diffraction of the included molecules. Theoretical studies demonstrated the vital role played by the dispersive forces in the overall stabilization of the crystal packing.

E. Sanna, E. C. Escudero-Adán, A. Bauzá, P. Ballester, A. Frontera, C. Rotger, A. Costa

Chem. Sci. 2015, 6, 5466-5472
DOI: Go to the journal

Observations

*Correction: Chem. Sci., 2016, 7, 2439

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