Chiral
BINOL-Based Covalent Organic Frameworks for
Enantioselective Sensing
Posted on 2019-04-11 - 00:00
Covalent
organic frameworks (COFs) have emerged as a novel platform
for material design and functional explorations, but it remains a
challenge to synthetically functionalize targeted structures for task-specific
applications. Optically pure 1,1′-bi-2-naphthol (BINOL) is
one of the most important sources of chirality for organic synthesis
and materials science, but it has not yet been used in construction
of COFs for enantioselective processes. Here, by elaborately designing
and choosing an enantiopure BINOL-based linear dialdehyde and a tris(4-aminophenyl)benzene
derivative or tetrakis(4-aminophenyl)ethene as building blocks, two
imine-linked chiral fluorescent COFs with a 2D layered hexagonal or
tetragonal structure are prepared. The COF containing flexible tetraphenylethylene
units can be readily exfoliated into ultrathin 2D nanosheets and electrospun
to make free-standing nanofiber membrane. In both the solution and
membrane systems, the fluorescence of COF nanosheets can be effectively
quenched by chiral odor vapors via supramolecular interactions with
the immobilized BINOL moieties, leading to remarkable chiral vapor
sensors. Compared to the BINOL-based homogeneous and membrane systems,
the COF nanosheets exhibited greatly enhanced sensitivity and enantioselectivity
owing to the confinement effect and the conformational rigidity of
the sensing BINOL groups in the framework. The ability to place such
a useful BINOL chiral auxiliary inside open channels of COFs capable
of amplifying chiral discrimination of the analytes represents a major
step toward the rational synthesis of porous molecular materials for
more chirality applications.