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Shape-selective covalent binding in bulk, microporous imprinted silica

The first demonstration of shape-selective covalent binding in bulk, microporous imprinted silica is provided. The synthetic approach utilizes acid-catalyzed sol–gel hydrolysis and condensation of tetraethyl orthosilicate with a carbamate-based organosilane imprint for synthesis of hybrid organic–in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Microporous and mesoporous materials 2006-02, Vol.89 (1), p.25-32
Main Authors: Defreese, Jessica L., Katz, Alexander
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The first demonstration of shape-selective covalent binding in bulk, microporous imprinted silica is provided. The synthetic approach utilizes acid-catalyzed sol–gel hydrolysis and condensation of tetraethyl orthosilicate with a carbamate-based organosilane imprint for synthesis of hybrid organic–inorganic materials. Cleavage of the immobilized imprint carbamate synthesizes isolated primary or secondary amines within templated pockets that are complementary to the imprint size and shape. Two chiral imprints are investigated. The imprint based upon a phenyl alcohol leaves an achiral primary amine after carbamate deprotection, while the imprint based upon a proline scaffold leaves behind a chiral secondary amine after carbamate deprotection. Binding selectivity of the imprinted silicas is investigated via the covalent attachment of racemic isocyanate mixtures for simultaneous assessment of shape-selectivity and enantioselectivity. Shape-selectivity for the binding of α-methylbenzyl isocyanate over a 1-naphthyl homologue was observed across a range of materials. Investigation of the origin of selectivity by using particles of varying size shows that the selectivity partially arises from bulk sieving effects of mass transport limitations in the material network. However, due to significant particle size distributions, it is possible that the system exists in an intermediate regime where binding results are a complex mixture of sieving and shape-selective imprinted site effects. The results are consistent with the previous observation that amines in bulk, microporous imprinted silica are isolated and have been confined to a microporous network. This confinement of the bulky imprints, which would be difficult to accomplish via a post-synthetic grafting procedure, illustrates the synthetic utility of the imprinting method.
ISSN:1387-1811
1873-3093
DOI:10.1016/j.micromeso.2005.09.023