- Calixarene
A calixarene is a
macrocycle or cyclicoligomer based on ahydroxyalkylation product of aphenol and analdehyde [1] . The word calixarene is derived from calix or chalice because this type of molecule resembles a vase and from the wordarene that refers to the aromatic building block. Calixarenes havehydrophobic cavities that can hold smaller molecules or ions and belong to the class ofcavitand s known inHost-guest chemistry . Calixarene nomenclature is straightforward and involves counting the number ofrepeating unit s in the ring and include it in the name. A calix [4] arene has 4 units in the ring and a calix [6] arene has 6. Asubstituent in themeso position Rb is added to the name with a prefix C- as in C-methylcalix [6] arene.ynthesis
The aromatic components are derived from
phenol ,resorcinol orpyrogallol , For phenol, the aldehyde most often used is simplyformaldehyde , while larger aldehydes (acetaldehyde , or larger) are generally required in condensation reactions with resorcinol and pyrogallol. Thechemical reaction ranks underelectrophilic aromatic substitution s followed by anelimination of water and then a second aromatic substitution. The reaction isacid catalysed or base catalysed. Calixarenes are difficult to produce because it is all too easy to end up with complex mixtures of linear and cyclic oligomers with different numbers of repeating units. With finely tuned starting materials and reaction conditions synthesis can also be surprisingly easy. In 2005, research produced a pyrogallol [4] arene by simply mixing asolvent-free dispersion ofisovaleraldehyde with pyrogallol and a catalytic amount of "p"-toluenesulfonic acid in amortar and pestle [2] . Calixarenes as parent compounds are sparingly soluble and are high melting crystalline solids [3] .tructure
Calixarenes are characterised by a three-dimensional basket, cup or bucket shape. In calix [4] arenes the internal
volume is around 10 cubicnanometer s. Calixarenes are characterised by a wide upper rim and a narrow lower rim and a central annulus. With phenol as a starting material the 4hydroxyl groups are intrannular on the lower rim. In a resorcin [4] arene 8 hydroxyl groups are placed extraannular on the upper ring. Calixarenes exist in differentchemical conformation s because rotation around the methylene bridge is not difficult. In calix [4] arene 4 up-down conformations exist: cone (point group C2v,C4v), partial cone Cs, 1,2 alternate C2h and 1,3 alternate D2d. The 4 hydroxyl groups interact byhydrogen bond ing and stabilize the cone conformation. This conformation is in dymamic equilibrium with the other conformations. Conformations can be locked in place with proper substituents replacing the hydroxyl groups which increase therotational barrier . Alternatively placing a bulky substituent on the upper rim also locks a conformation. The calixarene based onp-tert-butyl phenol is also a cone [http://www.iupac.org/publications/pac/1993/pdf/6503x0387.pdf] .History
Adolf von Baeyer pioneered the chemistry of calixarenes although he was unable to determine its structure and did not realise its potential (he was pursuing dyes). In 1872 he mixedbenzaldehyde withpyrogallol and a strongacid and noted a red-brownresin with a markedviscosity increase. He also usedresorcinol andformaldehyde which he had to prepare fromiodoform himself because a commercial grade of formaldehyde at that time had not been realised yet. In 1894 theLederer-Manasse hydroxyalkylation was invented as a synthetic tool for the preparation of hydroxylmethyl phenols, bringing calixarenes one step closer. In 1902Leo Baekeland madephenol formaldehyde resin s a commercial success under the trade nameBakelite . In these resins phenol and formaldehyde are exhaustively condensed with each other to form heavilycross-link edpolymers . The first attempt to control the reaction was made by Alois Zinke and Erich Ziegler in 1942. They employed para substituted phenols which inhibits crosslinking and should result in a linear polymer with formaldehyde. So in 1944p-tert-butyl phenol with formaldehyde andsodium hydroxide inlinseed oil as a solvent produced for the first time a crystalline solid with a high melting point rather than a resin. In the same year another duo by the names of Niederl and Vogel did something similar with a para substitutedresorcinol and they were the first to postulate a cyclic tetramer. In these days structure elucidation was limited to determination ofmolar mass byfreezing-point depression andfunctional group analysis.John Cornforth was in 1955 the first to realize the potential of calixarenes as a basket analogue toenzyme s and repeated the work done by Zinke. he obtained a mixture of products and elicited the services ofDorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin for structure elucidation byX-ray crystallography but with limited success. First commercial success came to calixarenes in the nineteen fifties when the companyPetrolite started a range of calixarene products asdemulsifier s user in theoil industry .The word calixarene was coined by David Gutsche [http://www.chm.tcu.edu/gutsche.htm] in 1975 who was also interested in this type of compound as
biomimetic , since the molecule resembled the "calyx krater " vases of ancient Greece. It was by then established that unmodified calixarenes exhibit extensive conformational mobility so that the basket was not much of a basket after all.Donald J. Cram fixed this shortcoming by inventing a way of immobilizing calixarenes. He was able to freeze in a conformation by so called lower rim functionalization, replacing thehydroxyl groups by largersubstituent s. Theacetate calixarene fixates the molecule as a partial cone, whereas thecarbonate ester yields the full cone.Host guest interactions
Calixarenes are efficient
sodium ionophore s and are applied as such in chemicalsensor s. With the right chemistry these molecules exhibit great selectivity towards other cations. Calixarenes are used in commercial applications as sodium selectiveelectrode s for the measurement of sodium levels in blood. Calixarenes also form complexes withcadmium ,lead ,lanthanide s andactinide s. [http://www.chem.ox.ac.uk/icl/beergroup/calixarene.htm] Calix [5] arene and the C70fullerene in "p"-xylene form a ball-and-socket supramolecular complex. [http://www.rsc.org/publishing/journals/CC/article.asp?doi=b306411p] calixarenes also form exo-calix ammonium salts with aliphatic amines such aspiperidine . [4]See
Host-guest chemistry .Molecular self-assembly
Molecular self-assembly of resorcinarenes and pyrogallolarenes lead to largersupramolecular assemblies [http://www.chem.missouri.edu/faculty/Atwood/research.html] . Both in the crystalline state and in solution, they are known to form hexamers that are akin to certainArchimedean solid s with an internal volume of around one cubicnanometer (nanocapsules). (Isobutylpyrogallol [4] arene)6 is held together by 48intermolecular hydrogen bonds. The remaining 24 hydrogen bonds areintramolecular . The cavity is filled by a number of solvent molecules. [5]Applications
Calixarenes are applied in enzyme mimetics, ion sensitive electrodes or sensors, selective membrames, non-linear optics [http://www.rsc.org/publishing/journals/CC/article.asp?doi=b502045j] and in
HPLC stationary phase [http://www.chromtech.net.au/grom-calixarene.cfm] . In addition, innanotechnology calixarenes are used asnegative resist for high-resolutionelectron beam lithography [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.115958] .A tetrathia [4] arene is found to mimic
aquaporin proteins [6] . This calixarene adopts a 1,3-alternate conformation (methoxy groups populate the lower ring) and water is not contained in the basket but grabbed by two opposingtert-butyl groups on the outer rim in a pincer. The nonporous andhydrophobic crystals are soaked in water for 8 hours in which time the calixarene:water ratio nevertheless acquires the value of one.Calixarenes are able to accelerate reactions taking place inside the concavity by a combination of local concentration effect and polar stabilization of the
transition state . An extended resorcin [4] arenecavitand is found to accelerate thereaction rate of aMenshutkin reaction betweenquinuclidine and butylbromide by a factor of 1600 [7] .In heterocalixarenes the phenolic units are replaced by
heterocycle s [8] , for instance byfuran s in calix [n] furanes and bypyridine s in calix [n] pyridines. Calixarenes have been used as themacrocycle portion of arotaxane and two calixarene molecules covalently joined together by the lower rims formcarcerand s.Esthetics
Building esthetic molecules with calixarenes include thus far a molecular
Football World Cup [http://www.rsc.org/publishing/journals/NJ/article.asp?doi=a805959d] .References
* [1] a) cite book | author=Gutsche, C. David | title=Calixarenes | location=Cambridge | publisher=Royal Society of Chemistry | year=1989 | id=ISBN 0-85186-385-X; b) GoldBookRef | title=Calixarenes | file=C00783 | year=1995
* [2] cite journal | author=Antesberger J, Cave GW, Ferrarelli MC, Heaven MW, Raston CL, Atwood JL | title=Solvent-free, direct synthesis of supramolecular nano-capsules | journal=Chemical communications (Cambridge, England) | volume=. | issue=7 | year=2005 | pages=892–4 | pmid=15700072 | doi=10.1039/b412251h
* [3] cite journal | author=McMahon G, O’Malley S, Nolan K and Diamond D | title=Important Calixarene Derivatives – their Synthesis and Applications | journal=Arkivoc | volume=Part | issue=vii | year=2003 | pages= [http://www.arkat-usa.org/ark/journal/2003/I07_McKervey/AM-720R/720R.asp Article]
* [4] cite journal | author=Nachtigall FF, Lazzarotto M and Braz FNJ | title=Interaction of Calix [4] arene and Aliphatic Amines: A Combined NMR, Spectrophotometric and Conductimetric Investigation | journal=Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society | volume=13 | issue=3 | year=2002 | pages= | doi=10.1590/S0103-50532002000300002 [http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-50532002000300002 Article]
* [5] cite journal | author=Atwood JL, Barbour LJ, Jerga A | title=Organization of the interior of molecular capsules by hydrogen bonding | journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume=99 | issue=8 | year=2002 | pages=4837–41 | pmid=11943875 | doi=10.1073/pnas.082659799
* [6] cite journal | author=Thallapally PK, Lloyd GO, Atwood JL, Barbour LJ | title=Diffusion of water in a nonporous hydrophobic crystal | journal=Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) | volume=44 | issue=25 | year=2005 | pages=3848–51 | pmid=15892031 | doi=10.1002/anie.200500749
* [7] cite journal | author=Purse BW, Gissot A, Rebek J Jr | title=A deep cavitand provides a structured environment for the menschutkin reaction | journal=Journal of the American Chemical Society | volume=127| issue=32 | year=2005 | pages=11222–3 | pmid=16089433 | doi=10.1021/ja052877
* [8] cite journal | author=Subodh Kumar, Dharam Paul, Harjit Singh| title=Syntheses, structures and interactions of heterocalixarenes | journal=Arkivoc | volume=05-1699LU| issue= | year=2006 | pages=17–25 | pmid= [http://www.arkat-usa.org/ark/journal/2006/I09_General/1699/05-1699LU%20as%20published%20mainmanuscript.pdf Article]
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