Organic Chemistry, Poster
OC-101

Assembly of Molecular Daisy Chains in Water

Y. Aeschi1, M. Mayor1,2*
1University of Basel, 2Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

Construction of supramolecular nanosystems based on molecular daisy chains is an appealing option as their monomers are self-complementary and allow to access cyclic or linear oligomers by changing monomer concentration or solvent polarity1. Our cyclophane-based approach for the synthesis of daisy chains relies on association driven by a hydrophobic effect combined with electrostatically complementary subunits. The zwitterionic monomer was found to assemble to linear and cyclic daisy chains in aqueous media, which could be characterized by 1H-NMR after interlocking with bulky stoppers via a CuAAC-“click”-reaction. Introduction of redox-active chromophores into the monomer is expected to give daisy chains with switchable dimensions, which could be integrated into molecular muscles. Synthetic investigations towards this goal are currently in progress.

[1] J. Rotzler et al. Chem. Soc. Rev. 2013, 42, 44-62