posted on 2018-03-01, 00:00authored byRomina Wechsel, Matej Žabka, John W. Ward, Jonathan Clayden
Symmetrical oligourea
foldamers were made from meso cyclohexane-1,2-diamine
and desymmetrised by incorporating terminal functional groups (carbamates,
ureas or thioureas) with differing hydrogen-bonding capacities. Irrespective
of solvent, the foldamers populate a dynamic equilibrium of two alternative
screw-sense conformers whose relative population is determined by
the competing hydrogen-bonding properties of the terminal groups,
dictating the foldamer’s global hydrogen-bond directionality.
Intermolecular association of these dynamic foldamers with achiral
anionic guests (acetate or phosphate, but not neutral hydrogen-bonding
solvents) leads to inversion of the conformational preference, as
strong intermolecular hydrogen bonding induces reorganization of the
intramolecular hydrogen-bond network. The foldamers behave as a molecular
torsion balance whose conformational preference is governed by competing
hydrogen-bond pairing.