Adjusting Rotational Behavior of Molecular Rotors by a Rational Tuning of Molecular Structure.

2021 
Many crystalline molecular rotors have been developed in the past decades. However, manipulating the rotational gesture that intrinsically controls the physical performance of materials remains a challenge. Herein, we report a series of crystalline rotors whose rotational gestures can be modulated by modifying the structures of molecular stators. In these dynamic crystals, the ox2- (ox2- = oxalate anion) behave as molecular rotators performing axial-free rotation in cavities composed of five complex cations, [MII(en)3]2+ (en = ethylenediamine). The structure of [MII(en)3]2+ that serves as a molecular stator can be tuned by varying the metal center with different ionic radii, consequently altering the chemical environment around the molecular rotator. Owing to the quasi-transverse isotropy of ox2- and multiple hydrogen-bond interactions around it, the molecular rotator exhibits unusual motional malleability, i.e., it can rotate either longitudinally in the compound of ZnII, or with a tilt angle of 42° in the compound of FeII, or even laterally in the compound of CdII. The atypical dynamic behavior demonstrated here provides a new chance for the development of exquisite crystalline molecular rotors with advanced tunable functionalities.
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