Computationally guided synthesis of a hierarchical [4[2+3]+6] porous organic ‘cage of cages’

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Abstract

Here we report a two-step, hierarchical synthesis that assembles a trigonal prismatic organic cage into a more symmetric, higher-order tetrahedral cage, or ‘cage of cages’. Both the preformed [2+3] trigonal prismatic cage building blocks and the resultant tetrahedral [4[2+3]+6]cage molecule are constructed using ether bridges. This strategy affords the [4[2+3]+6]cage molecule excellent hydrolytic stability that is not a feature of more common dynamic cage linkers, such as imines. Despite its relatively high molar mass (3,001 g mol−1), [4[2+3]+6]cage exhibits good solubility and crystallizes into a porous superstructure with a surface area of 1,056 m2 g−1. By contrast, the [2+3] building block is not porous. The [4[2+3]+6]cage molecule shows high CO2 and SF6 uptakes due to its polar skeleton. The preference for the [4[2+3]+6]cage molecule over other cage products can be predicted by computational modelling, as can its porous crystal packing, suggesting a broader design strategy for the hierarchical assembly of organic cages with synthetically engineered functions. (Figure presented.)

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Zhu, Q., Qu, H., Avci, G., Hafizi, R., Zhao, C., Day, G. M., … Cooper, A. I. (2024). Computationally guided synthesis of a hierarchical [4[2+3]+6] porous organic ‘cage of cages.’ Nature Synthesis, 3(7), 825–834. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44160-024-00531-7

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