Abstract

Ditopic salophen-UO(2) receptors 1-4 and 7 co-crystallize with tetramethylammonium (TMA) chloride and fluoride salts producing good quality crystals amenable for X-ray diffraction characterization. The arrangement of the receptor and salt units in the crystal lattice is such that tetrameric ball-shaped assemblies are formed, where an inner cluster of four TMA cations are surrounded by an outer shell of four UO(2)-bound anions. These elaborate architectures, which occur in all cases, regardless of a certain degree of structural modification on the receptors, lead to lattices that belong to non-centrosymmetric (NCS) space groups. Interestingly, the tetragonal symmetry of the tetrameric ball-shaped assemblies is either retained (I4̅) or lost (R3c and I4̅3d) at the lattice level, without compromising the NCS nature of the crystal lattices. The principal X-ray investigation on TMAX (X = Cl/F) co-crystals, that is, 1-(TMA)Cl, 2-(TMA)Cl, 3-(TMA)Cl, 4-(TMA)Cl, 7-(TMA)Cl, and 7-(TMA)F, is accompanied by NMR and electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry studies to gather additional insight on the modality of formation of the solid state structures observed. The important role of cation-π interactions in the receptor-salt recognition process is renewed and strengthened by comparison with NMR titration data with a novel reference compound, the salophen-UO(2) complex 8. Given the importance of NCS and polar crystalline solids in the development of functional materials, this study shows that this property can be introduced into elaborate host-guest systems, as those which assemble in the architectures described here, thus expanding its field of applicability.

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