posted on 2020-01-07, 14:34authored byAlex J. Plajer, Jinbo Zhu, Patrick Pröhm, Felix J. Rizzuto, Ulrich F. Keyser, Dominic S. Wright
Anion
binding by receptor molecules is a central field of modern
chemistry which impacts areas of catalysis as well as biological and
materials chemistry. As binding often requires high chemical stability
under aerobic and aqueous conditions for practical applications, carbon-based
anion receptors have dominated this field, with main group element
analogues receiving far less attention. The recent observation that
the air- and moisture-stable amino-cyclophosph(V)azanes of the
type [RN(E)P(μ-NR)]2 (E = O, S, Se) can
exhibit halide binding that is competitive with topologically related
organic receptors (such as squaramides and thioureas) has motivated
us here to explore how the binding properties of phosphazane receptors
can be enhanced further. Coordination of transition metals by the
two P,N metal coordination sites of the phosph(III)azane dimer [(2-py)NHP(μ-NtBu)]2 not only activates the receptor for anion
binding (by fixing the optimum exo-exo conformation
and polarizing the endocyclic N–H substituents) but also stabilizes
the P2N2 ring to hydrolysis and oxidation. We
show how the binding properties of these receptors can be modulated
by the coordinated metal fragments and that they can bind chloride
1 to 2 orders of magnitude stronger than the related squaramides and
thioureas. These features can be utilized in anion transport through
phospholipid bilayers under aqueous conditions for which transport
can be improved by 1 order of magnitude compared to the previous best
phosphazane and thiourea transporters. This study demonstrates how
careful design of inorganic systems can result in potent supramolecular
functionality, beyond that observed for organic counterparts.