ChemInform Abstract: Host-Guest Chemistry. Part 26. NMR and Fluorescence Studies of Cyclodextrin Complexes with Guest Molecules Containing Both Phenyl and Naphthyl Units.

ChemInform ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 22 (28) ◽  
pp. no-no
Author(s):  
H.-J. SCHNEIDER ◽  
T. BLATTER ◽  
S. SIMOVA
2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (32) ◽  
pp. 7702-7706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khaleel I. Assaf ◽  
Detlef Gabel ◽  
Wolfgang Zimmermann ◽  
Werner M. Nau

Unprecedented affinities for large-ring cyclodextrins have been achieved with purely inorganic guest molecules (dodecaborate cluster anions).


1996 ◽  
Vol 50 (8) ◽  
pp. 995-999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vincent C. Anigbogu ◽  
Isiah M. Warner

The effects of t-butyl (TB) compounds on the formation of β-cyclodextrin (CD)/pyrene complexes have been examined by monitoring changes in the fluorescence I/III band ratio of 1.0 × 10−7 M pyrene in 0.075 M of the t-butyl compounds and in various concentrations of β-CD in a solvent mixture consisting of 60% v/v methanol/40% water solution. For the compounds tested, the strongest effects were observed in the presence of the following (in decreasing order): TB-carbamate, TB-carbazate, TB-( N-hydroxy) carbamate, TB-( N-butoxy carbonyl) glycine, and TB-formate. In terms of enhancement of the pyrene/β-CD binding constant, all exhibited effects stronger than those previously reported for t-butyl alcohol. In contrast, TB-amine, TB-acetic acid, and TB-acetoacetate exhibited very little effect. There appears to be a relationship between the chemical structure of the modifier molecules and the magnitude of their concomitant effects on the I/III ratio. In fact, the t-butyl modifiers which exhibited moderate to strong effects have a common caboxy, –C–O–, skeleton attached to the t-butyl moiety in their general structure: (CH3)3C–O–R. The modifier effect was also found to be independent of the pH of the solutions. A detailed explanation has been offered for the observed changes in the I/III ratio relative to t-butyl functionalities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (28) ◽  
pp. 9688-9693
Author(s):  
Wei-Bin Yu ◽  
Feng-Yi Qiu ◽  
Po Sun ◽  
Hua-Tian Shi ◽  
Zhi-Feng Xin

The supramolecular assembly is significant in host–guest chemistry. In this work, a new supramolecular system assembled through a distorted cuboid was introduced. Moreover, the [4 + 4] cycloaddition reaction of the guest molecules was further studied under UV light.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Bin Jeon ◽  
Sehoon Park ◽  
Kyeong Rim Ryu ◽  
Suman Kr Ghosh ◽  
Jaehoon Jung ◽  
...  

This study has paved a new route to achieve in situ reversible tuning of chemical interface damping (CID) in the same gold nanorod (AuNR) and to investigate the CID process using cucurbituril (CB)-based host–guest chemistry with various guest molecules in single AuNRs.


Author(s):  
Ralph M. Albrecht ◽  
Scott R. Simmons ◽  
Marek Malecki

The development of video-enhanced light microscopy (LM) as well as associated image processing and analysis have significantly broadened the scope of investigations which can be undertaken using (LM). Interference/polarization based microscopies can provide high resolution and higher levels of “detectability” especially in unstained living systems. Confocal light microscopy also holds the promise of further improvements in resolution, fluorescence studies, and 3 dimensional reconstruction. Video technology now provides, among other things, a means to detect differences in contrast difficult to detect with the human eye; furthermore, computerized image capture, processing, and analysis can be used to enhance features of interest, average images, subtract background, and provide a quantitative basis to studies of cells, cell features, cell labelling, and so forth. Improvements in video technology, image capture, and cost-effective computer image analysis/processing have contributed to the utility and potential of the various interference and confocal microscopic instrumentation.Electron microscopic technology has made advances as well. Microprocessor control and improved design have contributed to high resolution SEMs which have imaging capability at the molecular level and can operate at a range of accelerating voltages starting at 1KV. Improvements have also been seen in the HVEM and IVEM transmission instruments. As a whole, these advances in LM and EM microscopic technology provide the biologist with an array of information on structure, composition, and function which can be obtained from a single specimen. Corrrelative light microscopic analysis permits examination of living specimens and is critical where the “history” of a cell, cellular components, or labels needs to be known up to the time of chemical or physical fixation. Features such as cytoskeletal elements or gold label as small as 0.01 μm, well below the 0.2 μm limits of LM resolution, can be “detected” and their movement followed by VDIC-LM. Appropriate identification and preparation can then lead to the examination of surface detail and surface label with stereo LV-HR-SEM. Increasing the KV in the HR-SEM while viewing uncoated or thinly coated specimens can provide information from beneath the surface as well as increasing Z contrast so that positive identification of surface and subsurface colloidal gold or other heavy metal labelled/stained material is possible. Further examination of the same cells using stereo HVEM or IVEM provides information on internal ultrastructure and on the relationship of labelled material to cytoskeletal or organellar distribution, A wide variety of investigations can benefit from this correlative approach and a number of instrumentational configurations and preparative pathways can be tailored for the particular study. For a surprisingly small investment in time and technique, it is often possible to clear ambiguities or questions that arise when a finding is presented in the context of only one modality.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Wang ◽  
Meng-Fan Wang ◽  
David James Young ◽  
Hua Zhu ◽  
Fei-Long Hu ◽  
...  

The bulkiness of the guest molecules influences the conformations of the ligand and the final outcomes of the cycloaddition reaction.


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