Abstract
The discovery of gigantic molecular nanostructures like coordination and polyoxometalate clusters is extremely time-consuming since a vast combinatorial space needs to be searched, and even a systematic and exhaustive exploration of the available synthetic parameters relies on a great deal of serendipity. Here we present a synthetic methodology that combines a flow reaction array and algorithmic control to give a chemical "real-space" search engine leading to the discovery and isolation of a range of new molecular nanoclusters based on [Mo2O2S2]2+-based building blocks with either fourfold (C4) or fivefold (C5) symmetry templates and linkers. This engine leads us to isolate six new nanoscale cluster compounds: 1, {Mo10(C5)}; 2, {Mo 14(C4)4(C5)2}; 3, {Mo60(C4)10}; 4, {Mo48(C 4)6}; 5, {Mo34(C4)4}; 6, {Mo18(C4)9}; in only 200 automated experiments from a parameter space spanning ~5 million possible combinations. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Zang, H. Y., De La Oliva, A. R., Miras, H. N., Long, D. L., McBurney, R. T., & Cronin, L. (2014). Discovery of gigantic molecular nanostructures using a flow reaction array as a search engine. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4715
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