Issue 11, 2006

Binding properties of p-tert-butyldihomooxacalix[4]arene tetra(2-pyridylmethoxy) derivative towards alkali, alkaline earth, transition and heavy metal cations

Abstract

The binding properties of tetra(2-pyridylmethoxy) (2) derived from p-tert-butyldihomo-oxacalix[4]arene, in the cone conformation, towards alkali, alkaline earth, transition (Mn2+, Fe2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+ and Zn2+) and heavy (Ag+, Cd2+, Hg2+ and Pb2+) metal cations have been assessed by extraction studies of metal picrates from water into dichloromethane and stability constant measurements in methanol and acetonitrile. Results concerning the calorimetric study of K+, Ba2+, Cu2+ and Ag+ complexes in acetonitrile are presented. The affinity of 2 for some cations (K+, Ag+, Zn2+, Hg2+ and Pb2+) has also been investigated by proton NMR spectrometry. The analogous derivative (3) of p-tert-butylcalix[4]arene was also studied, and the results of both compounds are compared. Towards the hard alkali and alkaline earth metal cations ligands 2 and 3 display a low efficiency of extraction. The complexation levels are also low in methanol becoming, however, much higher in acetonitrile. The highest stability is found for Ca2+ with ligand 2 in this solvent. Both ligands show a very high affinity for the soft heavy metal ions with preference for Ag+, but other ions such as Hg2+, Pb2+ and Cu2+ are also well bound. Proton NMR titrations confirm the formation of 1 : 1 complexes between 2 and all the cations studied, also indicating that they should be located inside the cavity defined by the phenoxy oxygen and the pyridyl nitrogen atoms.

Graphical abstract: Binding properties of p-tert-butyldihomooxacalix[4]arene tetra(2-pyridylmethoxy) derivative towards alkali, alkaline earth, transition and heavy metal cations

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Jun 2006
Accepted
01 Aug 2006
First published
31 Aug 2006

New J. Chem., 2006,30, 1655-1661

Binding properties of p-tert-butyldihomooxacalix[4]arene tetra(2-pyridylmethoxy) derivative towards alkali, alkaline earth, transition and heavy metal cations

P. M. Marcos, B. Mellah, J. R. Ascenso, S. Michel, V. Hubscher-Bruder and F. Arnaud-Neu, New J. Chem., 2006, 30, 1655 DOI: 10.1039/B608003K

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