Abstract

Pd-catalysed Stille and Suzuki cross-couplings were used to prepare 9-(3-indenyl)-, 6, and 9-(2-indenyl)-anthracene, 7; addition of benzyne led to the 9-Indenyl-triptycenes, 8 and 9. In 6, [4 + 2] addition also occurred to the indenyl substituent. Reaction of 6 through 9 with Cr(CO)6 or Re2(CO)10 gave their M(CO)3 derivatives, where the Cr or Re was complexed to a six- or five-membered ring, respectively. In the 9-(2-indenyl)triptycene complexes, slowed rotation of the paddlewheel on the NMR time-scale was apparent in the η5-Re(CO)3 case and, when the η6-Cr(CO)3 was deprotonated, the resulting haptotropic shift of the metal tripod onto the five-membered ring also blocked paddlewheel rotation, thus functioning as an organometallic molecular brake. Suzuki coupling of ferrocenylboronic acid to mono- or dibromoanthracene yielded the ferrocenyl anthracenes en route to the corresponding triptycenes in which stepwise hindered rotations of the ferrocenyl groups behaved like molecular dials. CuCl2-mediated coupling of methyl- and phenyl-indenes yielded their rac and meso 2,2′-biindenyls; surprisingly, however, the apparently sterically crowded rac 2,2′-Bis(9-triptycyl)biindenyl functioned as a freely rotating set of molecular gears. The predicted high rotation barrier in 9-phenylanthracene was experimentally validated via the Pd-catalysed syntheses of di(3-fluorophenyl)anthracene and 9-(1-naphthyl)-10-phenylanthracene.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe goal of creating artificial molecule-scale mechanical systems (e.g., molecular machines, shuttles, gears, rotors, turnstiles) has attracted enormous attention within the synthetic community [1,2]

  • In recent decades, the goal of creating artificial molecule-scale mechanical systems has attracted enormous attention within the synthetic community [1,2]

  • Suzuki coupling of ferrocenylboronic acid to mono- or dibromoanthracene yielded the ferrocenyl anthracenes en route to the corresponding triptycenes in which stepwise hindered rotations of the ferrocenyl groups behaved like molecular dials

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Summary

Introduction

The goal of creating artificial molecule-scale mechanical systems (e.g., molecular machines, shuttles, gears, rotors, turnstiles) has attracted enormous attention within the synthetic community [1,2]. We focus on one selected approach-transition metal catalysed coupling [3], towards the synthesis of the “skeletal backbones” of molecular mechanical systems, their basic construction elements. We collect together some of our own work and focus on molecular machines and rotors, whereby a defined pair of molecular fragments is connected by a rotatable single C-C bond (Figure 1, part iv) to attain restricted intramolecular rotation. An appropriate cross-coupling procedure appeared to offer the most propitious to 67.and 7

Synthetic
Rotational Barriers in di-Indenyl Anthracenes
Cycloadditions of Benzyne to 2-Phenylindene
Organometallic Derivatives of Indenyl Anthracenes
Organometallic Derivatives of Indenyl Triptycenes
Mono- and di-Ferrocenyl Triptycenes
The the synthesis of such molecules requires
Cycloaddition Reactions of Mono- and di-Ferrocenyl Anthracenes
Cross-Coupling of 2-Phenyl- and 2-Methyl Indenes
The Curious Case of the 2-Indenyltriptycene Dimer
Hindered Rotations in Phenyl-Anthracenes
Findings
Conclusions
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