Porous Molecular Capsules as Non-Polymeric Transducers of Mechanical Forces to Mechanophores

Chemistry. 2020 Feb 3;26(7):1558-1566. doi: 10.1002/chem.201904024. Epub 2020 Jan 7.

Abstract

Mechanical grinding/milling can be regarded as historically the first technology for changing the properties of matter. Mechanically activated molecular units (mechanophores) can be present in various structures: polymers, macromolecules, or small molecules. However, only polymers have been reported to effectively transduce energy to mechanophores, which induces breakage of covalent bonds. In this paper, a second possibility is presented-molecular capsules as stress-sensitive units. Mechanochemical encapsulation of fullerenes in cystine-based covalent capsules indicates that complexation takes place in the solid state, despite the fact that the capsules do not possess large enough entrance portals. By using a set of solvent-free MALDI (sf-MALDI) and solid-state NMR (ss-NMR) experiments, it has been proven that encapsulation proceeds during milling and in this process hydrazones and disulfides get activated for breakage, exchange, and re-forming. The capsules are porous and therefore prone to collapse under solvent-free conditions and their conformational rigidity promotes the collapse by the breaking of covalent bonds.

Keywords: mechanochemistry; solid-phase synthesis; solid-state NMR spectroscopy; solvent-free MALDI; supramolecular chemistry.