Loading…

Oligo[2]catenane That Is Robust at Both the Microscopic and Macroscopic Scales

Polycatenanes are extremely attractive topological architectures on account of their high degrees of conformational freedom and multiple motion patterns of the mechanically interlocked macrocycles. However, exploitation of these peculiar structural and dynamic characteristics to develop robust caten...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2023-04, Vol.145 (16), p.9011-9020
Main Authors: Bai, Ruixue, Zhang, Zhaoming, Di, Weishuai, Yang, Xue, Zhao, Jun, Ouyang, Hao, Liu, Guoquan, Zhang, Xinhai, Cheng, Lin, Cao, Yi, Yu, Wei, Yan, Xuzhou
Format: Article
Language:English
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Polycatenanes are extremely attractive topological architectures on account of their high degrees of conformational freedom and multiple motion patterns of the mechanically interlocked macrocycles. However, exploitation of these peculiar structural and dynamic characteristics to develop robust catenane materials is still a challenging goal. Herein, we synthesize an oligo[2]­catenane that showcases mechanically robust properties at both the microscopic and macroscopic scales. The key feature of the structural design is controlling the force-bearing points on the metal-coordinated core of the [2]­catenane moiety that is able to maximize the energy dissipation of the oligo[2]­catenane via dissociation of metal-coordination bonds and then activation of sequential intramolecular motions of circumrotation, translation, and elongation under an external force. As such, at the microscopic level, the single-molecule force spectroscopy measurement exhibits that the force to rupture dynamic bonds in the oligo[2]­catenane reaches a record high of 588 ± 233 pN. At the macroscopic level, our oligo[2]­catenane manifests itself as the toughest catenane material ever reported (15.2 vs 2.43 MJ/m3). These fundamental findings not only deepen the understanding of the structure-property relationship of poly[2]­catenanes with a full set of dynamic features but also provide a guiding principle to fabricate high-performance mechanically interlocked catenane materials.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.3c00221