Salts and Co-Crystalline Assemblies of Tetra(4-Pyridyl)Ethylene with Di-Carboxylic Acids

Tetraarylethylene derivatives are emerging as an increasingly important family of supramolecular building blocks in both solution phase and the solid state. The utility of tetraarylethylenes stems from appealing structural features (rigidity and symmetry) and their propensity to exhibit aggregation...

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Main Authors: Moustafa T. Gabr, F. Christopher Pigge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-01-01
Series:Crystals
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/8/1/41
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spelling doaj-fd70b78a32cb46fb8461f463155d76602020-11-25T00:12:07ZengMDPI AGCrystals2073-43522018-01-01814110.3390/cryst8010041cryst8010041Salts and Co-Crystalline Assemblies of Tetra(4-Pyridyl)Ethylene with Di-Carboxylic AcidsMoustafa T. Gabr0F. Christopher Pigge1Department of Chemistry, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USADepartment of Chemistry, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USATetraarylethylene derivatives are emerging as an increasingly important family of supramolecular building blocks in both solution phase and the solid state. The utility of tetraarylethylenes stems from appealing structural features (rigidity and symmetry) and their propensity to exhibit aggregation induced emission (AIE). In an effort to investigate the luminescent sensing ability of heteroaromatic tetraarylethylenes, we previously prepared tetra(4-pyridyl)ethylene and characterized its solution phase AIE properties. We here report the successful incorporation of tetra(4-pyridyl)ethylene into three distinct salts and co-crystalline assemblies with three organic di-carboxylic acids (oxalic acid, malonic acid, and fumaric acid). Interactions between the tetra(pyridyl)ethylene and di-acid components were found to vary from conventional to charge-assisted hydrogen bonding according to the extent of proton transfer between the acid and pyridine groups. Notably, the formation of pyridinium-carboxylate adducts in the salts does not appear to be strongly correlated with acid pKa. Three distinct network topologies were observed, and all featured the bridging of two or three tetra(pyridyl)ethylene groups through di-acid linkers. Crystalline assemblies also retained the AIE activity of tetra(pyridyl)ethylene and were luminescent under UV light. As tetra(4-pyridyl)ethylene features four Lewis basic and potentially metal ligating pyridine rings in a relatively well-defined geometry, this compound represents an attractive building block for the design of additional crystalline organic and metal–organic functional materials.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/8/1/41supramolecular chemistrycrystal engineeringco-crystalshydrogen bonded organic frameworksaggregation induced emission
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Moustafa T. Gabr
F. Christopher Pigge
spellingShingle Moustafa T. Gabr
F. Christopher Pigge
Salts and Co-Crystalline Assemblies of Tetra(4-Pyridyl)Ethylene with Di-Carboxylic Acids
Crystals
supramolecular chemistry
crystal engineering
co-crystals
hydrogen bonded organic frameworks
aggregation induced emission
author_facet Moustafa T. Gabr
F. Christopher Pigge
author_sort Moustafa T. Gabr
title Salts and Co-Crystalline Assemblies of Tetra(4-Pyridyl)Ethylene with Di-Carboxylic Acids
title_short Salts and Co-Crystalline Assemblies of Tetra(4-Pyridyl)Ethylene with Di-Carboxylic Acids
title_full Salts and Co-Crystalline Assemblies of Tetra(4-Pyridyl)Ethylene with Di-Carboxylic Acids
title_fullStr Salts and Co-Crystalline Assemblies of Tetra(4-Pyridyl)Ethylene with Di-Carboxylic Acids
title_full_unstemmed Salts and Co-Crystalline Assemblies of Tetra(4-Pyridyl)Ethylene with Di-Carboxylic Acids
title_sort salts and co-crystalline assemblies of tetra(4-pyridyl)ethylene with di-carboxylic acids
publisher MDPI AG
series Crystals
issn 2073-4352
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Tetraarylethylene derivatives are emerging as an increasingly important family of supramolecular building blocks in both solution phase and the solid state. The utility of tetraarylethylenes stems from appealing structural features (rigidity and symmetry) and their propensity to exhibit aggregation induced emission (AIE). In an effort to investigate the luminescent sensing ability of heteroaromatic tetraarylethylenes, we previously prepared tetra(4-pyridyl)ethylene and characterized its solution phase AIE properties. We here report the successful incorporation of tetra(4-pyridyl)ethylene into three distinct salts and co-crystalline assemblies with three organic di-carboxylic acids (oxalic acid, malonic acid, and fumaric acid). Interactions between the tetra(pyridyl)ethylene and di-acid components were found to vary from conventional to charge-assisted hydrogen bonding according to the extent of proton transfer between the acid and pyridine groups. Notably, the formation of pyridinium-carboxylate adducts in the salts does not appear to be strongly correlated with acid pKa. Three distinct network topologies were observed, and all featured the bridging of two or three tetra(pyridyl)ethylene groups through di-acid linkers. Crystalline assemblies also retained the AIE activity of tetra(pyridyl)ethylene and were luminescent under UV light. As tetra(4-pyridyl)ethylene features four Lewis basic and potentially metal ligating pyridine rings in a relatively well-defined geometry, this compound represents an attractive building block for the design of additional crystalline organic and metal–organic functional materials.
topic supramolecular chemistry
crystal engineering
co-crystals
hydrogen bonded organic frameworks
aggregation induced emission
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/8/1/41
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