Rational
Design of an Amphiphilic Coordination Cage-Based
Emulsifier
Version 2 2019-03-25, 23:44Version 2 2019-03-25, 23:44
Version 1 2018-12-07, 19:48Version 1 2018-12-07, 19:48
Posted on 2019-03-25 - 23:44
Self-assembled, porous coordination
cages with a functional interior
find application in controlled guest inclusion/release, drug delivery,
separation processes, and catalysis. However, only few studies exist
that describe their utilization for the development of self-assembled
materials based on their 3-dimensional shape and external functionalization.
Here, dodecyl chain-containing, acridone-based ligands (LA) and shape-complementary phenanthrene-derived
ligands (LB) are shown to self-assemble
to heteroleptic coordination cages cis-[Pd2(LA)2(LB)2]4+ acting as a
gemini amphiphile (CGA-1; Cage-based Gemini Amphiphile-1).
Owing to their anisotropic decoration with short polar and long nonpolar
side chains, the cationic cages were found to assemble into vesicles
with diameters larger than 100 nm in suitable polar solvents, visualized
by cryo-TEM and Liquid-Cell Transmission Electron Microscopy (LC-TEM).
LC-TEM reveals that these vesicles aggregate into chains and necklaces
via long-range interactions. In addition, the cages show a rarely
described ability to stabilize oil-in-oil emulsions.
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Saha, Subhadeep; Holzapfel, Björn; Chen, Yen-Ting; Terlinden, Kai; Lill, Pascal; Gatsogiannis, Christos; et al. (2018). Rational
Design of an Amphiphilic Coordination Cage-Based
Emulsifier. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.8b10991