Impact of flexible succinate connectors on the formation of tetrasulfonylcalix[4]arene based nano-sized polynuclear cages: structural diversity and induced chirality study†
Abstract
The building of new supramolecular coordination containers, obtained through the linking of tetrasulfonylcalix[4]arene (3-4H) based transition metal tetra- or trinuclear clusters with succinic acid (suc), as a flexible aliphatic connector possessing high conformational mobility and rotational freedom, produced a variety of three different polynuclear species in the crystalline phase, which were characterized by single crystal and powder X-ray diffraction. In the case of CoII and NiII cations, the formation of unique chiral-induced isomorphous supramolecular architectures, generated by interconnection of dimeric M8-cages with the co-crystallized M(OH)2DMF4 neutral species via H-bonding, was observed. Moreover, it was found that, in contrast to what was observed with NiII cations, the use of cobalt(II) ions in the same multicomponent system, led to the formation of achiral M8-cages which were characterized by the presence of both left- and right-handed succinic acid moieties within the supramolecular entity structure. Finally, the coordination of ZnII cations with 3-4H and succinic acid produced the generation of dimeric M6-cages where two trinuclear [Zn3-3]2+ cationic clusters were bound by two succinic carboxylate units.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Introducing the CrystEngComm Advisory Board and their research