We have prepared NHC‐CuI complexes with a rotaxane structure and used them as sterically sensitive catalysts for one‐pot sequential copper‐catalyzed azide/alkyne cycloadditions in solutions containing all of the coupling partners premixed in unprotected form. Most notably, a photolabile and sterically encumbered complex first catalyzed the coupling of a less bulky azide/alkyne pair; after removing the protective macrocyclic component from the rotaxane structure, through irradiation with light, the exposed dumbbell‐shaped NHC‐CuI complex catalyzed the second click reaction of a bulkier azide/alkyne pair. Using this approach, we obtained predominantly, from a single sealed pot, a bis‐triazole product (84 %) from a mixture of two sterically distinct azides and a diyne.
We have prepared NHC‐CuI complexes with a rotaxane structure and used them as sterically sensitive catalysts for one‐pot sequential copper‐catalyzed azide/alkyne cycloadditions in solutions containing all of the coupling partners premixed in unprotected form. Most notably, a photolabile and sterically encumbered complex first catalyzed the coupling of a less bulky azide/alkyne pair; after removing the protective macrocyclic component from the rotaxane structure, through irradiation with light, the exposed dumbbell‐shaped NHC‐CuI complex catalyzed the second click reaction of a bulkier azide/alkyne pair. Using this approach, we obtained predominantly, from a single sealed pot, a bis‐triazole product (84 %) from a mixture of two sterically distinct azides and a diyne.
Sodium ion-controlled switching from "folded" to "linear" states results in significant changes in the molecular shape of a [2]catenane, such that it mimics the operation of a gin trap, with a fluorescent alarm signal appearing when pyrene side arms were present on its two macrocyclic components.
Encircling macrocycles around N-heterocyclic carbenes, in the form of [2]rotaxanes, is a practical approach for increasing the persistence of these highly reactive species in solution.
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