English
Adjective
supramolecular
- consisting of many molecules; of scale or complexity greater than that
of a molecule
Derived terms
Supramolecular chemistry refers to the area of
chemistry that focuses
on the
noncovalent
bonding interactions of molecules. While traditional chemistry
focuses on the
covalent
bond, supramolecular chemistry examines the weaker and
reversible noncovalent interactions between molecules. These forces
include
hydrogen
bonding, metal coordination,
hydrophobic
forces,
van
der Waals forces,
pi-pi
interactions and
electrostatic effects.
Important concepts that have been demonstrated by supramolecular
chemistry include
molecular
self-assembly,
folding,
molecular
recognition,
host-guest
chemistry,
mechanically-interlocked molecular architectures, and
dynamic
covalent chemistry. The study of non-covalent interactions is
crucial to understanding many biological processes from cell
structure to vision that rely on these forces for structure and
function. Biological systems are often the inspiration for
supramolecular research.
History
The existence of intermolecular forces was first
postulated by
Johannes Diderik van der Waals in 1873. However, it is with
Nobel laureate
Hermann
Emil Fischer that supramolecular chemistry has its
philosophical roots. In 1890, Fischer suggested that
enzyme-substrate interactions take the form of a "lock and key",
pre-empting the concepts of
molecular
recognition and
host-guest
chemistry. In the early twentieth century noncovalent bonds
were understood in gradually more detail, with the hydrogen bond
being described by Latimer and Rodebush in 1920.
The use of these principles led to an increasing
understanding of
protein
structure and other biological processes. For instance, the
important breakthrough that allowed the elucidation of the double
helical structure of
DNA occurred when it
was realized that there are two separate strands of nucleotides
connected through hydrogen bonds. The use of noncovalent bonds is
essential to replication because they allow the strands to be
separated and used to template new double stranded DNA.
Concomitantly, chemists began to recognize and study synthetic
structures based on noncovalent interactions, such as
micelles and
microemulsions.
Eventually, chemists were able to take these
concepts and apply them to synthetic systems. The breakthrough came
in the 1960s with the synthesis of the
crown ethers
by
Charles
J. Pedersen. Following this work, other researchers such as
Donald J.
Cram,
Jean-Marie
Lehn and
Fritz Vogtle
became active in synthesizing shape- and ion-selective receptors,
and throughout the 1980s research in the area gathered a rapid pace
with concepts such as mechanically-interlocked molecular
architectures emerging.
The importance of supramolecular chemistry was
established by the 1987
Nobel Prize
for Chemistry which was awarded to Donald J. Cram, Jean-Marie Lehn,
and Charles J. Pedersen in recognition of their work in this area.
The development of selective "host-guest" complexes in particular,
in which a host molecule recognizes and selectively binds a certain
guest, was cited as an important contribution.
In the 1990s, supramolecular chemistry became
even more sophisticated, with researchers such as
James
Fraser Stoddart developing
molecular
machinery and highly complex
self-assembled
structures, and
Itamar
Willner developing sensors and methods of electronic and
biological interfacing. During this period,
electrochemical and
photochemical
motifs became integrated into supramolecular systems in order to
increase functionality, research into synthetic self-replicating
system began, and work on molecular information processing devices
began. The emerging science of
nanotechnology also had a
strong influence on the subject, with building blocks such as
fullerenes,
nanoparticles, and
dendrimers becoming involved
in synthetic systems.
Control of supramolecular chemistry
Thermodynamics
Supramolecular chemistry deals with subtle
interactions, and consequently control over the processes involved
can require great precision. In particular, noncovalent bonds have
low energies and often no
activation
energy for formation. As demonstrated by the
Arrhenius
equation, this means that, unlike in covalent bond-forming
chemistry, the rate of bond formation is not increased at higher
temperatures. In fact,
chemical
equilibrium equations show that the low bond energy results in
a shift towards the breaking of supramolecular complexes at higher
temperatures.
However, low temperatures can also be problematic
to supramolecular processes. Supramolecular chemistry can require
molecules to distort into thermodynamically disfavored
conformations (e.g. during
the "slipping" synthesis of
rotaxanes), and may include
some covalent chemistry that goes along with the supramolecular. In
addition, the dynamic nature of supramolecular chemistry is
utilized in many systems (e.g.
molecular
mechanics), and cooling the system would slow these
processes.
Thus,
thermodynamics is an
important tool to design, control, and study supramolecular
chemistry. Perhaps the most striking example is that of
warm-blooded biological systems, which cease to operate entirely
outside a very narrow temperature range.
Environment
The molecular environment around a
supramolecular system is also of prime importance to its operation
and stability. Many solvents have strong hydrogen bonding,
electrostatic, and charge-transfer capabilities, and are therefore
able to become involved in complex equilibria with the system, even
breaking complexes completely. For this reason, the choice of
solvent can be critical.
Concepts in supramolecular chemistry
Molecular self-assembly
Molecular
self-assembly is the construction of systems without guidance
or management from an outside source (other than to provide a
suitable environment). The molecules are directed to assemble
through noncovalent interactions. Self-assembly may be subdivided
into intermolecular self-assembly (to form a
supramolecular
assembly), and intramolecular self-assembly (or
folding
as demonstrated by
foldamers and polypeptides).
Molecular self-assembly also allows the construction of larger
structures such as
micelles,
membranes,
vesicles,
liquid
crystals, and is important to
crystal
engineering.
Molecular recognition and complexation
Molecular
recognition is the specific binding of a guest molecule to a
complementary host molecule to form a
host-guest
complex. Often, the definition of which species is the "host"
and which is the "guest" is arbitrary. The molecules are able to
identify each other using noncovalent interactions. Key
applications of this field are the construction of
molecular
sensors and
catalysis.
Template-directed synthesis
Molecular recognition and
self-assembly may be used with reactive species in order to
pre-organize a system for a chemical reaction (to form one or more
covalent bonds). It may be considered a special case of
supramolecular
catalysis. Noncovalent bonds
between the reactants and a "template" hold the reactive sites of
the reactants close together, facilitating the desired chemistry.
This technique is particularly useful for situations where the
desired reaction conformation is thermodynamically or kinetically
unlikely, such as in the preparation of large macrocycles. This
pre-organization also serves purposes such as minimizing side
reactions, lowering the
activation
energy of the reaction, and producing desired
stereochemistry. After
the reaction has taken place, the template may remain in place, be
forcibly removed, or may be "automatically" decomplexed on account
of the different recognition properties of the reaction product.
The template may be as simple as a single metal ion or may be
extremely complex.
Mechanically-interlocked molecular architectures
Mechanically-interlocked
molecular architectures consist of molecules that are linked
only as a consequence of their topology. Some noncovalent
interactions may exist between the different components (often
those that were utilized in the construction of the system), but
covalent bonds do not. Supramolecular chemistry, and
template-directed synthesis in particular, is key to the efficient
synthesis of the compounds. Examples of mechanically-interlocked
molecular architectures include
catenanes,
rotaxanes,
molecular
knots, and
molecular
Borromean rings.
Dynamic covalent chemistry
In
dynamic
covalent chemistry covalent bonds are broken and formed in a
reversible reaction under thermodynamic control. While covalent
bonds are key to the process the system is directed by noncovalent
forces to form the lowest energy structures.
Biomimetics
Many synthetic supramolecular systems are
designed to copy functions of biological systems. These
biomimetic architectures can
be used to learn about both the biological model and the synthetic
implementation. Examples include photoelectrochemical systems,
catalytic systems,
protein
design and
self-replication.
Imprinting
Molecular
imprinting describes a process by which a host is constructed
from small molecules using a suitable molecular species as a
template. After construction, the template is removed leaving only
the host. The template for host construction may be subtly
different from the guest that the finished host bind. In its
simplest form, imprinting utilizes only
steric interactions, but more
complex systems also incorporate hydrogen bonding and other
interactions to improve binding strength and specificity.
Molecular machinery
Molecular
machines are molecules or molecular assemblies that can perform
functions such as linear or rotational movement, switching, and
entrapment. These devices exist at the boundary between
supramolecular chemistry and nanotechnology, and prototypes have
been demonstrated using supramolecular concepts.
Building blocks of supramolecular chemistry
Supramolecular
systems are rarely designed from first principles. Rather, chemists
have a range of well-studied structural and functional building
blocks that they are able to use to build up larger functional
architectures. Many of these exist as whole families of similar
units, from which the analog with the exact desired properties can
be chosen.
Synthetic recognition motifs
- The pi-pi charge-transfer interactions of bipyridinium with
dioxyarenes or diaminoarenes have been used extensively for the
construction of mechanically interlocked systems and in crystal
engineering.
- The use of crown ether
binding with metal or ammonium cations is ubiquitous in
supramolecular chemistry.
- The formation of carboxylic acid dimers and other simple
hydrogen bonding interactions.
- The complexation of bipyridines or tripyridines with ruthenium, silver or other metal ions is of
great utility in the construction of complex architectures of many
individual molecules.
- The complexation of porphyrins or phthalocyanines around
metal ions gives access to catalytic, photochemical and
electrochemical properties as well as complexation. These units are
used a great deal by nature.
Macrocycles
Macrocycles are very useful in supramolecular
chemistry, as they provide whole cavities that can completely
surround guest molecules and may be chemically modified to
fine-tune their properties.
Structural units
Many supramolecular systems require their
components to have suitable spacing and conformations relative to
each other, and therefore easily-employed structural units are
required.
Photo-/electro-chemically active units
- Porphyrins, and
phthalocyanines
have highly tunable photochemical and electrochemical activity as
well as the potential for forming complexes.
- Photochromic
and photoisomerizable
groups have the ability to change their shapes and properties
(including binding properties) upon exposure to light.
- TTF and
quinones have more than
one stable oxidation state, and therefore can be switched with
redox chemistry or electrochemistry. Other units such as benzidine derivatives,
viologens groups and
fullerenes, have also
been utilized in supramolecular electrochemical devices.
Biologically-derived units
- The extremely strong complexation between avidin and biotin is instrumental in blood
clotting, and has been used as the recognition motif to construct
synthetic systems.
- The binding of enzymes with their cofactors has been used as a
route to produce modified enzymes, electrically contacted enzymes,
and even photoswitchable enzymes.
- DNA has
been used both as a structural and as a functional unit in
synthetic supramolecular systems.
Applications
Materials technology
Supramolecular chemistry and
molecular
self-assembly processes in particular have been applied to the
development of new materials. Large structures can be readily
accessed using
bottom-up synthesis as they are composed of small molecules
requiring fewer steps to synthesize. Thus most of the bottom-up
approaches to
nanotechnology are based
on supramolecular chemistry.
Catalysis
A major application of supramolecular chemistry
is the design and understanding of
catalysts and
catalysis. Noncovalent
interactions are extremely important in catalysis, binding
reactants into conformations suitable for reaction and lowering the
transition state energy of reaction. Template-directed synthesis is
a special case of supramolecular catalysis. Encapsulation systems
such as micelles and dendrimers are also used in catalysis to
create microenvironments suitable for reactions (or steps in
reactions) to progress that is not possible to use on a macroscopic
scale.
Medicine
Supramolecular chemistry is also important to the
development of new pharmaceutical therapies by understanding the
interactions at a drug binding site. The area of
drug
delivery has also made critical advances as a result of
supramolecular chemistry providing encapsulation and targeted
release mechanisms. In addition, supramolecular systems have been
designed to disrupt
protein-protein
interactions that are important to cellular function.
Data storage and processing
Supramolecular chemistry has
been used to demonstrate computation functions on a molecular
scale. In many cases, photonic or chemical signals have been used
in these components, but electrical interfacing of these units has
also been shown by supramolecular signal
transduction devices.
Data
storage has been accomplished by the use of
molecular
switches with
photochromic and
photoisomerizable
units, by
electrochromic and
redox-switchable units,
and even by molecular motion. Synthetic
molecular
logic gates have been demonstrated on a conceptual level. Even
full-scale computations have been achieved by semi-synthetic
DNA
computers.
Green chemistry
Research in supramolecular chemistry also
has application in
green
chemistry where reactions have been developed which proceed in
the solid state directed by non-covalent bonding. Such procedures
are highly desirable since they reduce the need for solvents during
the production of chemicals.
Other Devices and Functions
Supramolecular chemistry is
often pursued to develop new functions that cannot appear from a
single molecule. These functions also include
magnetic properties, light
responsiveness, self-healing polymers,
molecular
sensors, etc. Supramolecular research has been applied to
develop high-tech sensors, processes to treat radioactive waste,
and contrast agents for
CAT
scans.
References
supramolecular in Bosnian: Supramolekularna
hemija
supramolecular in Catalan: Química
supramolecular
supramolecular in Czech: Supramolekulární
chemie
supramolecular in German: Supramolekulare
Chemie
supramolecular in Spanish: Química
supramolecular
supramolecular in French: Chimie
supramoléculaire
supramolecular in Hindi: विशाल अणुकणिका रसायन
शास्त्र
supramolecular in Indonesian: Kimia
supramolekul
supramolecular in Italian: Chimica
supramolecolare
supramolecular in Hebrew: כימיה סופרא
מולקולרית
supramolecular in Polish: Chemia
supramolekularna
supramolecular in Russian: Супрамолекулярная
химия
supramolecular in Chinese:
超分子化學