Abstract

The host–guest inclusion complexes of cucurbiturils with alkyl viologen have interesting architectures, chemical properties, and potential applications in sensors and nanotechnology. A highly hydrated triclinic crystal of cucurbit[8]uril (CB[8]) complexed by methyl hexadecyl viologen (MVC16) is characterized by the unprecedented coexistence in the crystal of three host–guest complexes with 3:2, 2:2, and 1:1 stoichiometries. In all these complexes, the hook-shaped alkyl chain of the MVC16 is hosted in the CB[8] macrocycles, while the methyl viologen moieties have various environments. In the Z-shaped 3:2 complex, a central CB[8] unit hosts two viologen heads in the cavity, while the 2:2 complex is held together by π-stacking interactions between two viologen units. In the square 2D tiling crystal packing of CB[8] macrocycles, the same site which favors the dimerization observed in the 2:2 complex is also statistically occupied by a single methyl viologen moiety of the 1:1 complex. The rational interpretation of the crystal structure represented an intriguing challenge, due to the complicated statistical disorder in the alkyl chains hosted in CB[8] units and in the methyl viologen moieties of 2:2 and 1:1 complexes. In contrast with the solution behavior dominated by the 2:1 complex, the coexistence of three host–guest complexes with 3:2, 2:2, and 1:1 ratios highlights the fundamental importance of packing effects in the crystallized supramolecular complexes. Therefore, the crystallization process has permitted us to capture different host–guest systems in a single crystal, revealing a supramolecular landscape in a single photo.

Highlights

  • The host−guest inclusion complexes of cucurbiturils with alkyl viologen have interesting architectures, chemical properties, and potential applications in sensors and nanotechnology

  • We have reported a thorough study of the influence of the alkyl chain length on the binding mode of methyl alkyl viologens to CB[8]

  • The formation of the 2:1 host/guest complex is a direct consequence of the inclusion of the viologen unit in one CB[8] unit and the folding of the longer alkyl chain buried in a second CB[8] hydrophobic cavity

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Summary

Introduction

The host−guest inclusion complexes of cucurbiturils with alkyl viologen have interesting architectures, chemical properties, and potential applications in sensors and nanotechnology. The unprecedented 2:1 stoichiometry observed in the crystal structure of CB[8] complexed with methyl octadecyl viologen identified 12 as the minimum number of carbon atoms necessary to fill the CB[8] cavity by an aliphatic chain with a U-shaped conformation.23

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