Issue 31, 2017

The crystalline sponge method: a solvent-based strategy to facilitate noncovalent ordered trapping of solid and liquid organic compounds

Abstract

A strategy that leverages solvent effects to noncovalently trap solid and unstable liquid organic compounds within a crystalline sponge ({[(ZnI2)3(tris(4-pyridyl)-1,3,5-triazine)2x(CHCl3)}n) in a simple, mild, and efficient fashion for target molecule structure determination via X-ray diffraction is disclosed. Host–guest structures were obtained using third-generation synchrotron radiation, and new beamline hardware allowed rapid data collection in ∼5–24 minutes. This is 40–90% faster than previously reported crystalline sponge synchrotron datasets collected by us, and approximately a 150–720-fold decrease in time versus using a typical in-house diffractometer, effectively enabling the potential for high-throughput analysis. The new target molecule inclusion method using methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) solvent was demonstrated by trapping (E)-stilbene, vanillin, 4-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl azide, and (+)-artemisinin (an antimalarial drug). The potential of guests to maximize intermolecular interactions with the crystalline sponge framework at the expense of attenuating intramolecular interactions (e.g., π-conjugation) was observed for (E)-stilbene. Trapping of vanillin and (+)-artemisinin elicited single-crystal-to-single-crystal transformations where space group symmetry reduced from C2/c to P[1 with combining macron] and C2, respectively, and the absolute configuration of (+)-artemisinin was determined through anomalous dispersion.

Graphical abstract: The crystalline sponge method: a solvent-based strategy to facilitate noncovalent ordered trapping of solid and liquid organic compounds

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 May 2017
Accepted
13 Jul 2017
First published
14 Jul 2017

CrystEngComm, 2017,19, 4528-4534

The crystalline sponge method: a solvent-based strategy to facilitate noncovalent ordered trapping of solid and liquid organic compounds

T. R. Ramadhar, S. Zheng, Y. Chen and J. Clardy, CrystEngComm, 2017, 19, 4528 DOI: 10.1039/C7CE00885F

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