Beyond Passive Substituents: Tosyl-Directed Self-Templation Enables Selective Pillar[4 + 1]arene Formation and Topology Switching
4
Issued Date
2026-06-17
Resource Type
ISSN
00027863
eISSN
15205126
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-105042179675
Pubmed ID
42200695
Journal Title
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume
148
Issue
23
Start Page
23965
End Page
23975
Rights Holder(s)
SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of the American Chemical Society Vol.148 No.23 (2026) , 23965-23975
Suggested Citation
Ruengsuk A., Khamphaijun K., Laoviwat P., Kamonsutthipaijit N., Tuntirungrotechai J., Shigeta Y., Hengphasatporn K., Harding D.J., Bunchuay T. Beyond Passive Substituents: Tosyl-Directed Self-Templation Enables Selective Pillar[4 + 1]arene Formation and Topology Switching. Journal of the American Chemical Society Vol.148 No.23 (2026) , 23965-23975. 23975. doi:10.1021/jacs.6c03673 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/117561
Title
Beyond Passive Substituents: Tosyl-Directed Self-Templation Enables Selective Pillar[4 + 1]arene Formation and Topology Switching
Corresponding Author(s)
Other Contributor(s)
Abstract
Substituents in supramolecular chemistry are usually treated as passive handles that tune solubility or reactivity rather than as active determinants of assembly pathways. Here we show that tosyl groups promote directional noncovalent recognition and thereby control both cocyclization selectivity and postassembly topology in pillararenes. Under otherwise identical conditions, brominated analogues give statistical mixtures in which the pillar[4 + 1]arene product appears at only 1–19% distribution, whereas tosyl-substituted monomers undergo pseudorotaxane-like preassembly that enables highly selective self-templated pillar[4 + 1]arene formation without added external templates. A crystallographic survey of 12 single-crystal structures (N = 12), together with VT NMR, SAXS, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, and fragment molecular orbital (FMO) analysis, establishes a valency–topology relationship in which increasing tosyl valency drives a progression from discrete monomers to interpenetrated dimers and higher-order aggregates. This substituent-dependent behavior extends across a broader alkoxy series, indicating that the effect is not limited to a single monomer pair. Upon benzoquinone oxidation, the tosyl-containing copillar[4 + 1]arene undergoes temperature-dependent switching between interpenetrated and self-included states, accompanied by changes in aggregation, a charge-transfer spectral shift, and reversible thermochromism quantifiable by ultraviolet–visible (UV–vis) spectroscopy and smartphone colorimetry. These findings establish substituent identity as an active design parameter for constructing reconfigurable and functionally responsive macrocyclic systems.
