A Photoresponsive Receptor with a 10 Magnitude of Reversible Anion-Binding Switching
Affiliations
In a leap toward anion separation that uses only energy input for binding and release cycles, we report herein a new class of photoswitchable anion receptors featuring a diiminoguanidinium functionality that displays a change of more than five orders of magnitude in switched-off binding strength towards sulfate, a representative oxyanion, upon photoirradiation with UV light. The (E,E)-2-pyridyl-diiminoguanidinium cation, synthesized as the triflate salt, binds sulfate with extraordinary strength in [D ]DMSO owing to its bidentate guanidinium hydrogen bonding, which can chelate the O-S-O edge of sulfate. Upon photoisomerization to the Z,Z isomer, the anion-binding site is essentially shut off by intramolecular hydrogen bonds to the 2-pyridyl substituents, as shown by anion-binding titrations, theoretical calculations, and X-ray structural analysis. This approach will allow the development of advanced anion-separation cycles that use only energy input and generate no chemical waste, and thus address challenging chemical separation problems in a more sustainable way.
Stimulus-Controlled Anion Binding and Transport by Synthetic Receptors.
de Jong J, Bos J, Wezenberg S Chem Rev. 2023; 123(13):8530-8574.
PMID: 37342028 PMC: 10347431. DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.3c00039.