Diazine-Tetraphenylethylene Cyclo[6]arenes for Molecular Recognition in Solution and Aggregate States

Diazine-Tetraphenylethylene Cyclo[6]arenes for Molecular Recognition in Solution and Aggregate States

Author: Aggregate
Author Archive: Aggregate

Molecular recognition is fundamental to both supramolecular chemistry and biological processes. Integrating tetraphenylethylene (TPE) into cyclic skeletons presents a promising strategy for tailoring inherently luminescent macrocycles, bridging supramolecular macrocyclic chemistry with aggregation-induced emission materials. However, embedding this propeller-shaped fluorophore usually induces “twisted and flattened” cavity conformations, resulting in the loss of molecular recognition function in dilute solutions, especially in TPE-embedded pillar[6]arenes. Therefore, facile structural modification of such macrocycles for effective dual-state recognition in both dilute solutions and aggregate states remains an unresolved challenge.

Inspired by natural enzymes, Jialin Xie, Chunman Jia, Hainan University, China, and colleagues have developed three TPE-based cyclo[6]arenes (termed TPz, TDz, and TTz) with endo-functionalized cavities containing inward-directed diazine motifs (pyrazine, pyridazine, and phthalazine) that act as H-bond acceptor sites.

  1. Electrostatic potential maps revealed that subtle structural variations among diazine motifs substantially modulate intracavity charge distribution with increasing electron density from TPz to TTz.
  2. SCXRD (Single Crystal X-ray Diffraction) analysis verified that the diazine motifs adopt equatorial conformation with N atoms oriented toward cavities as endo-binding sites.
  3. Systematic host–guest binding studies revealed that internal microenvironment variations translate into disparate host–guest affinities, with TTz showing the optimal performance.
  4. Unlike TPz’s single aggregate-state recognition capability, 1,2-diazine-modified TDz and TTz show dual-state functionality, enabling both size-selective cation binding in dilute solutions and sensitive fluorescence detection of nitrophenol pollutants in aggregate states via a static-quenching mechanism driven by photo-induced electron transfer.

Overall, this study provides new insights into the underutilized 1,2-diazine motifs as effective H-bond acceptors and offers a versatile platform for customizing biomimetic host systems with emergent functionalities.


 

Leave a Reply

Kindly review our community guidelines before leaving a comment.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *