Southampton chemists create switchable gold catalyst
Dr Steve Goldup, Associate Professor of Supramolecular Chemistry, and his team have developed a catalyst with significantly enhanced properties based on a rotaxane, in which a gold catalyst is embedded in the cavity formed by threading a ring shaped molecule around a dumbell shaped axle.
On its own, the rotaxane gold catalyst is unreactive but the addition of ions that bind into a pocket in the catalyst framework leads to rapid reactions. Excitingly, different ions lead to different reaction products by changing the shape of the catalyst, a trick that nature's catalyst use to control selectivity and activity in living cells. The 'best' ion for each reaction depends on the reactants used, suggesting that this approach could be used to tailor catalysts to each desired product.
Dr Goldup said: "We applied our efficient methods for the synthesis of rotaxanes to a novel gold complex and studied its behaviour in detail using NMR and X-ray crystallography. We chose gold catalysis for our initial experiments as it is perhaps the quintessential example of a 'hard to influence' reaction. To achieve this kind of control using more standard approaches, ligands are often very large and hard to make. Although rotaxanes are often considered challenging targets, recent advances make them extremely easy to access. As we demonstrated here, they also bring the added advantage of stimuli responsive behaviour."
Dr Goldup explains that the potential application of this work could be exciting: "We think mechanically bonded ligands have the potential to solve problems in catalysis by providing easy access to complex reaction environments. Rotaxane-based catalysts have potential applications in the development of new ways of making important compounds like drugs and electronic materials."
Original publication
Other news from the department science
Get the chemical industry in your inbox
From now on, don't miss a thing: Our newsletter for the chemical industry, analytics, lab technology and process engineering brings you up to date every Tuesday and Thursday. The latest industry news, product highlights and innovations - compact and easy to understand in your inbox. Researched by us so you don't have to.