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Title: | Smaragdyrins: Emeralds of Expanded Porphyrin Family |
Authors: | Chandrashekar, Tavarekere Kalliah |
Keywords: | Anions Fluorescence Macrocycles Pyrroles Reaction mechanisms |
Issue Date: | 31-Aug-2012 |
Publisher: | Accounts of Chemical Research |
Citation: | Pareek, Y., Ravikanth, M., & Chandrashekar, T. K. (2012). Smaragdyrins: emeralds of expanded porphyrin family. Accounts of Chemical Research, 45(10), 1801–1816. |
Abstract: | Porphyrins are tetrapyrrolic 18 π electron conjugated macrocycles with wide applications that range from materials to medicine. Expanded porphyrins, synthetic analogues of porphyrins that contain more than 18 π electrons in the conjugated pathway, have an increased number of pyrroles or other heterocyles or multiple meso-carbon bridges. The expanded porphyrins have attracted tremendous attention because of unique features such as anion binding or transport that are not present in porphyrins. Expanded porphyrins exhibit wide applications that include their use in the coordination of large metal ions, as contrasting agents in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as sensitizers for photodynamic therapy (PDT) and as materials for nonlinear optical (NLO) studies. Pentaphyrin 1, sapphyrin 2, and smaragdyrin 3 are expanded porphyrins that include five pyrroles or heterocyclic rings. They differ from each other in the number of bridging carbons and direct bonds that connect the five heterocyclic rings. Sapphyrins were the first stable expanded porphyrins reported in the literature and remain one of the most extensively studied macrocycles. The strategies used to synthesize sapphyrins are well established, and these macrocycles are versatile anion binding agents. They possess rich porphyrin-like coordination chemistry and have been used in diverse applications. This Account reviews developments in smaragdyrin chemistry. Although smaragdyrins were discovered at the same time as sapphyrins, the chemistry of smaragdyrins remained underdeveloped because of synthetic difficulties and their comparative instability. Earlier efforts resulted in the isolation of stable β-substituted smaragdyrins and meso-aryl isosmaragdyrins. Recently, researchers have synthesized stable meso-aryl smaragdyrins by [3 + 2] oxidative coupling reactions. These results have stimulated renewed research interest in the exploration of these compounds for anion and cation binding, energy transfer, fluorescent sensors, and their NLO properties. Recently reported results on smaragdyrin macrocycles have set the stage for further synthetic studies to produce stable meso-aryl smaragdyrins with different inner cores to study their properties and potential for various applications. |
URI: | https://doi.org/10.1021/ar300136s http://idr.niser.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/976 |
Appears in Collections: | Journal Papers |
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