DP
D. A. Poole
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1
Journal article
(2025)
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T. Bouwens, E. O. Bobylev, L. S.D. Antony, D. A. Poole, E. Alarcón-Lladó, S. Mathew, J. N.H. Reek
Selective formation of multicomponent structures via the self-assembly of numerous building blocks is ubiquitous in biological systems but challenging to emulate synthetically. More components introduce additional possibilities for kinetic intermediates with trap-state ability, hampering access to desired products. In covalent chemistry, templates, reagents and catalysts are applied to create alternative pathways for desired product formation. Analogously, we enlist exo-templating to mould the formation of large, multicomponent supramolecular structures. Specifically, a charged ring docks at 1,5-dioxynaphthalene stations within exo-functionalized building blocks to promote formation of cuboctahedral Pd12L24 nanospheres via exoskeletal templating. With the exo-templating ring present, nanosphere formation occurs via small Pdx–Ly oligomers, while in the absence of the ring a Pdx–Ly polymer resting state rapidly evolves, from which nanosphere formation occurs slowly. We demonstrate a form of kinetic templating—via intermediate destabilization—resembling properties observed in catalysis. Importantly, unlike typically employed endo-templates, we demonstrate that exo-templating is particularly suited for larger, complex, self-assembled structures.
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Selective formation of multicomponent structures via the self-assembly of numerous building blocks is ubiquitous in biological systems but challenging to emulate synthetically. More components introduce additional possibilities for kinetic intermediates with trap-state ability, hampering access to desired products. In covalent chemistry, templates, reagents and catalysts are applied to create alternative pathways for desired product formation. Analogously, we enlist exo-templating to mould the formation of large, multicomponent supramolecular structures. Specifically, a charged ring docks at 1,5-dioxynaphthalene stations within exo-functionalized building blocks to promote formation of cuboctahedral Pd12L24 nanospheres via exoskeletal templating. With the exo-templating ring present, nanosphere formation occurs via small Pdx–Ly oligomers, while in the absence of the ring a Pdx–Ly polymer resting state rapidly evolves, from which nanosphere formation occurs slowly. We demonstrate a form of kinetic templating—via intermediate destabilization—resembling properties observed in catalysis. Importantly, unlike typically employed endo-templates, we demonstrate that exo-templating is particularly suited for larger, complex, self-assembled structures.