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UCLA chemists have devised an elegant solution to
an intricate problem at the nanoscale that stumped scientists for many
years: They have made a mechanically interlocked compound whose
molecules have the topology of the beloved interlocked Borromean
rings. In the May 28 issue of the journal Science, the team reports
nanoscience that could be described as art.
The UCLA group is the first to achieve this goal in
total chemical synthesis, which research groups worldwide have been
pursuing.
Named for a noble Italian family, the Borromean
rings first appeared on the family's coat of arms in the 15th century.
Examples of the rings can be seen in buildings on three islands in
northern Italy's Lake Maggiore, which are still owned by the Borromeo
family. The Borromean link comprises three interlocked rings that form
one inseparable union such that cutting any one ring results in the
other two falling apart.
"This is nanoscience, but also much more," said
Fraser Stoddart, UCLA's Fred Kavli Professor of Nanosystems Sciences
and director of the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA. "The
Borromean Rings pervade art, theology, mythology and heraldry, as well
as mathematics, physics and chemistry. Go to the Google search engine
and you are confronted with more than 2,000 hits."
"The realization of the Borromean link in a wholly
synthetic molecular form has long been regarded as the most ambitious
and challenging target in topological chemistry -- a Gordian knot,"
Stoddart said. "The near-quantitative assembly of this topological
link from 18 components by templation around six metals of six organic
pieces with two 'teeth' and another six with three 'teeth' to grip the
metals, resulting in the intermittent opening and closing of 12
carbon-nitrogen double bonds, cuts this Gordian knot once and for
all."
(An ancient Greek oracle foretold that whoever
untied the intricate Gordian knot, a knot with no ends exposed, would
rule all of Asia. The problem resisted all attempted solutions until
333 B.C., when Alexander the Great is said to have cut through the
knot with his sword.)
The "high-risk, all-in-one, mix-the-pieces together,
and shake-them-all-about" approach was the brain-child in November
1999 of graduate student Stuart Cantrill in Stoddart's research group.
Cantrill is now a lecturer and research associate in UCLA's department
of chemistry and biochemistry.
Aided by the computational wizardry of fellow
graduate student Anthony Pease, Cantrill conceived a topology that was
modeled to vindicate the perfect matching of the three identical,
mutually interlocking rings around the six metal templates. "The three
rings slotted into place perfectly, encompassing the six metals
effortlessly in three-dimensional space," Cantrill said.
"We both stared at the screen and agreed there and
then that it just had to work," Cantrill said. "It looked so perfect,
so beautiful."
"Putting the caboodle together in the computer was
one thing; translating it into a chemical reality in the laboratory
was quite another," Stoddart said. Two of the three sets of six pieces
could be bought, but the remaining one had to be made in a complex
seven-step synthesis.
The first tentative steps were taken by Pease, who
said, "As a computational chemist, I would normally avoid getting my
hands wet in the laboratory, but this molecule was so irresistible, I
decided to give it a try."
Cantrill and Pease graduated from UCLA in 2001 and
left the completion of the synthesis of the all-important third piece
to postdoctoral fellow Shien-Hsien Chiu, now an assistant professor of
chemistry at the National Taiwan University.
"With all three pieces in place, the most
challenging part of the puzzle still lay ahead of us," Stoddart said.
"I was then blessed with the arrival in 2002 of postdoctoral
researcher extraordinaire Kelly Chichak. He brought with him a
knowledge base and expertise in coordination and supramolecular
chemistry that made him a natural when it came to doing chemical
synthesis in a proofreading, error-checking fashion. It would not have
happened without Kelly's nous."
Chichak said, "I just happened to land in the right
place at the right time. I was immediately sucked into the quest for
the molecular Borromean rings because of their rich history and
appealing symmetry."
His challenge was to unearth just the right set of
conditions to coax 18 components to click together in one way and give
"a beautifully crafted molecule which literally made itself in my
hands," according to Chichak.
Stoddart views the near-quantitative assembly as
one of the finest that dynamic chemistry has delivered in his
laboratory to date. "It doesn't happen all that often: it is good old
thermodynamics to the rescue, with a real vengeance at that."
Or as Chichak puts it, "Simply mix and heat and a
single product emerges out of the thousands of possibilities: That's
all I needed to do."
More than 30 years ago, Robert Woodward at Harvard
and Albert Eschenmoser at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
(ETH) in Zürich created Vitamin B12 chemically in a laboratory, a
triumph of chemical synthesis, Stoddart noted. "Similarly, during the
past decade, a total synthesis of Borromean rings in a molecular form
has become the Herculean challenge in contemporary synthesis, where
Darwinian selection operates in a chemically evolving system," he said.
Chichak obtained X-ray-quality single crystals from
which postdoctoral fellow Gareth Cave solved the structure in the
laboratory of Jerry Atwood, chemistry professor at the University of
Missouri, Columbia.
Each molecule of the Borromean ring compound is 2.5
nanometers across and contains an inner chamber that is a quarter of a
cubic nanometer in volume and is lined by 12 oxygen atoms.
"When your mind turns to potential applications,
the molecule has so much going for it," Stoddart said.
"Now that we are addressing what they might do for
us, the list becomes endless," Chichak said.
Release URL, if available: The URL must point to
the specific release, not a general page of releases or your
organization's main homepage.IThe ability to produce gram quantities
of highly soluble hosts that can locate a range of different
transition metals in an insulated octahedral array around an inner
oxygen atom-lined chamber, which can provide a welcoming home for many
different guests, suggests numerous ways in which these molecular
Borromean rings could be explored as highly organized nano?clusters in
a materials setting such as spintronics or in a biological context
such as medical imaging, Stoddart said.
"When all is said and done, the molecular Borromean
rings should be judged by their magnificent looks at this early stage
in their existence," Stoddart said. "As one of the reviewers of the
original manuscript wrote, 'The beauty of the molecular structure is
really breathtaking.'" |