Abstract Chemical reactions conducted in the solid phase (specifically, crystalline) are much less numerous than solution reactions, primarily due to reduced motion, flexibility, and reactivity. The main advantage of crystalline‐state transformations is that reactant molecules can be designed to self‐assemble into specific spatial arrangements, often leading to high control over product regiochemistry and/or stereochemistry. In crystalline‐phase transformations, typically only one type of reaction occurs, and a sacrificial template molecule is frequently used to facilitate self‐assembly, similar to a catalyst or enzyme. Here, we demonstrate the first system designed to undergo two chemically unique and orthogonal cycloaddition reactions simultaneously within a single crystalline solid. Well‐controlled supramolecular self‐assembly of two molecules containing different reactive moieties affords orthogonal reactivity without use of a sacrificial template. Using only UV light, the simultaneous [2+2] and [4+4] cycloadditions are achieved regiospecifically, stereospecifically, and products are obtained in high yield, whereas a simultaneous solution‐state reaction affords a mixture of isomers in low yield. Application of dually‐reactive systems toward (supra)molecular solar thermal storage materials is also discussed. This work demonstrates fundamental chemical approaches for orthogonal reactivity in the crystalline state and highlights the complexity and reversibility that can be achieved with supramolecular design.
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Supramolecular chemistry under mechanochemical conditions: a small molecule template generated and integrated into a molecular-to-supramolecular and back-to-molecular cascade reaction
We describe the integration of a small-molecule hydrogen-bond-donor template into a cascade reaction that is comprised of a combination of molecular and supramolecular events. The cascade is performed mechanochemically and in the presence of μL amounts of water. The small-molecule template is generated (molecular) using water-assisted vortex grinding and is then used to assemble an alkene (supramolecular) to undergo an intermolecular [2 + 2] photodimerization reaction (molecular). The chemical cascade results in a cyclobutane photoproduct that we show serves as a building block of a hydrogen-bonded network with a topology that conforms to T-silica. Remarkably, the molecular–supramolecular–molecular chemical cascade occurs stepwise and entirely regioselectively within the continuous mechanochemical conditions employed.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1708673
- PAR ID:
- 10252908
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Chemical Science
- Volume:
- 11
- Issue:
- 13
- ISSN:
- 2041-6520
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 3569 to 3573
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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