“…Cyclodextrins, which comprise a chain of six to eight d ‐glucose monomers connected through the C‐1 and C‐4 positions, provide hydrophobic cavities for guest molecules as water‐soluble solubilizing agents. In particular, porphyrin–trimethyl‐β‐cyclodextrin (TMe‐β‐CDx, comprising seven d ‐glucose monomers, Figure ) complexes with pseudorotaxane structures in which two meso ‐phenyl moieties penetrate the upper rim of two TMe‐β‐CDx molecules have been formed by using porphyrin derivatives with four phenyl substituents in the meso positions , , . When porphyrin derivatives with four phenyl moieties are incorporated into two TMe‐β‐CDx molecules, two types of phenyl moiety are present, namely, two penetrating the upper rim of the two TMe‐β‐CDx molecules and two sandwiched between the two TMe‐β‐CDx molecules.…”