Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Benoit Colasson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Benoit Colasson.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Electrochemically Triggered Double Translocation of Two Different Metal Ions with a Ditopic Calix(6)arene Ligand

Benoit Colasson; Nicolas Le Poul; Yves Le Mest; Olivia Reinaud

A ditopic ligand based on a calix[6]arene with three imidazoles (Im) appended at the small rim and three triazoles (Tria) at the large one is able to form selectively two stable heterodinuclear complexes with Zn(II)(Im)/Cu(I)(Tria) and Cu(II)(Im)/Zn(II)(Tria). In the Cu(I) case, the zinc cation is preferentially coordinated at the Im site while the copper is bound at the Tria site. The situation is the opposite when Cu(II) is used. The position of the two cations within the complex can be electrochemically switched via the oxidation-reduction of the copper cation between oxidation states +I and +II. The presence of the zinc cation is crucial (i) to control the bistability of the system by an allosteric structuring role and (ii) to promote the metal switch since the monocopper complex exhibits reversible behavior with Cu located at the imidazole site in both oxidation states. This represents the first example of a double translocation of two different metal cations.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Redox Active Cage for the Electrochemical Sensing of Anions

Valeria Amendola; Massimo Boiocchi; Benoit Colasson; Luigi Fabbrizzi; Enrico Monzani; Maria Jesús Douton-Rodriguez; Cristina Spadini

The tripodal system [1]3+ forms a 1:1 complex with CoII in which the metal is octahedrally coordinated by three bpy fragments. The [CoII(1)]5+ complex provides a cavity suitable for solvent or anion inclusion. X-ray diffraction studies on the crystalline complex salt of formula [CoII(1)...H2O]Cl(PF6)(4).2MeCN have shown that a water molecule is included in the cavity and the water oxygen atom receives six H-bonds from the C-H fragments of the three imidazolium subunits and of the three proximate pyridine rings, according to a slightly distorted trigonal prismatic geometry. Anion inclusion in an aqueous MeCN solution induces a distinct cathodic shift of the potential of the CoIII/CoII couple, whose magnitude decreases along the series: Cl->Br- approximately NCO->I- approximately NCS-, which reflects anion tendencies to receive H-bonds from the receptor. The variation of the water content in the MeCN solution (from 0 to 20%) induces a gradual change of the voltammetric response to anion titration: from two well distinguished peaks at a fixed potential to a single peak progressively shifted to a more cathodic potential. Such a behavior parallels the gradual decrease of the equilibrium constant for anion inclusion into the [CoII(1)]5+ receptor.


Chemical Science | 2012

Recognition of primary amines in water by a zinc funnel complex based on calix[6]arene

Olivia Bistri; Benoit Colasson; Olivia Reinaud

A water-soluble calix[6]arene-based tris(imidazole) ligand behaves as a highly selective receptor for primary amines in the presence of Zn(II) in water near physiological pH. It represents the first compound of this family of ligands that binds a Zn dication and an organic guest in water, thus giving rise to a stable host–guest adduct in spite of the highly competitive medium. The herein described self-assembly process displays a remarkable set of biomimetic properties. The ternary system (calix/Zn/amine) is formed in a very synergistic and allosteric manner and stabilizes the neutral form of the amino guest with a spectacular pseudo-pKa shift of ca. 7 units. This system constitutes an interesting structural model of metalloenzymes in aqueous solution.


Chemical Science | 2014

Selective recognition of fluoride anion in water by a copper(II) center embedded in a hydrophobic cavity

Andrea Brugnara; Filip Topić; Kari Rissanen; Aurélien de la Lande; Benoit Colasson; Olivia Reinaud

The ability of a water-soluble pentacationic calix[6]arene-based CuII complex to bind anions in water has been explored. Quite remarkably, the complex exhibits strong and selective fluoride binding in the pH range of 6–7. The binding constant at pH 5.9 was evaluated to be 85 000 M−1, which is one of the highest values ever reported for a fluoride probe in water and at this pH. The complex also binds chloride ions, but 1000 times less efficiently. The combination of the calix[6]arene hydrophobic cavity with the CuII complex, presenting its labile site in the endo position, is the reason for the selective recognition process. The single crystal X-ray structure of the organo-soluble parent complex revealed a strong interaction between the coordinated fluoride anion and a hosted CHCl3 solvent molecule. Molecular modeling applying an aqueous environment suggests that a water cluster, [F·H2O·H2O]−, is the species recognized by the host, which provides an appropriate environment for the stabilization of such a hydrated fluoride guest/species.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Tris(triazolyl) calix[6]arene-based zinc and copper funnel complexes: imidazole-like or pyridine-like? A comparative study.

Benoit Colasson; Nicolas Le Poul; Yves Le Mest; Olivia Reinaud

Huisgen dipolar cycloaddition leads straightforwardly to new funnel complexes based on the calix[6]arene macrocycle bearing three functionalized triazoles as coordinating units at the small rim. Coordination to Zn(II) and Cu(I) cations was studied using (1)H NMR and IR spectroscopies and cyclic voltammetry. The nature of the substituents on the triazole ring affects the behavior of the ligands and their coordinating ability and controls the host-guest properties of the metal receptors for exogenous substrates. Depending on their substitution pattern but also on the metal ion and the guest ligand, the triazole-based systems behave either imidazole-like or pyridine-like. The ease of preparation and the versatility of 1,4-disubstituted-1,2,3-triazoles with tunable steric and electronic properties make them promising candidates for further applications from biology to materials.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Calorimetric study on coordination of tridentate imidazolyl calix[6]arene ligands to zinc ion in organic solvents.

Koji Kano; Masataka Kondo; Haruka Inoue; Hiroaki Kitagishi; Benoit Colasson; Olivia Reinaud

Complexation of three kinds of tris(imidazolyl)calix[6]arenes containing alternate p-substituents (Calix-tBu, R(1) = R(2) = tert-butyl; Calix-NH(2), R(1) = tert-butyl, R(2) = NH(2); Calix-NO(2), R(1) = tert-butyl, R(2) = NO(2)) with Zn(ClO(4))(2)(H(2)O)(6) in acetonitrile, methanol, and THF was investigated via isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). For the coordination of these calixarene ligands to Zn(II) in acetonitrile, typical one-phase exothermic titration curves were obtained, indicating the formation of 1:1 ligand-Zn(II) complexes accompanied by large conformational changes of the ligands. In contrast, the complexation in methanol was endothermic and dominated by favorable entropy changes. The entropy gains were achieved by extensive desolvation from both Zn(II) and the ligands. ITC measurements suggest a 2:1 ligand-Zn(II) complex formation in THF in the presence of excess ligands (Calix-NH(2) and Calix-NO(2)). The 2:1 complexes were converted to 1:1 complexes upon further addition of Zn(ClO(4))(2)(H(2)O)(6). The results indicate the important role of a coordinating solvent (acetonitrile) for direct formation of the 1:1 complexes under the conditions of excess ligand. Complexation of a ditopic ligand (Calix-Tri) with three triazole moieties on the wider rim was also studied via ITC. The first coordination of the imidazole moieties to Zn(II) was an exothermic process. This was followed by the entropically favorable coordination of the triazole moieties to the divalent cation. We have also investigated exchange of the fourth ligand (H(2)O) of the Zn(II) complex of Calix-NH(2) with butylamine, heptylamine, acetonitrile, and acetamide in a noncompetitive solvent, THF. The ΔH(0) tended to decrease upon increasing the electron-pair-donating ability of the guest ligand, whereas it was also affected by an entropic term due to restricted rotation of the guest ligand inside the calixarene cavity.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Supramolecular Control of Hetero-multinuclear Polytopic Binding of Metal Ions (ZnII, CuI) at a Single Calix[6]arene-Based Scaffold

Jean-Noël Rebilly; Olivia Bistri; Benoit Colasson; Olivia Reinaud

A Calix[6]arene scaffold was functionalized to provide a tridentate binding site at the small rim and three bidentate chelate sites at the large rim of the cone to generate a heteropolytopic ligand. Its complexation to one equivalent of Zn(II) at the small rim yields a funnel complex displaying both host-guest properties and preorganization of the three chelate groups at the large rim. These two aspects allowed the full control of the binding events to regioselectively form dinuclear Zn(II) and heteropolynuclear Zn(II)/Cu(I) complexes. The heteropolynuclear systems all rely on the host-guest relationship thanks to the induced-fit behavior of the calix cavity. With the short guest MeCN, the large rim is preorganized into a trigonal tris-triazole core and accommodates a single Cu(I) ion. A long guest breaks this spatial arrangement, and three Cu(I) ions can then be bound at the tris-bidentate triazole-dimethylamine site at the large rim. In a noncoordinating solvent however, the tetranuclear complex is submitted to scrambling and the addition of exogenous π-acceptor ligands is required to control the binding of Cu(I) in a well-defined environment. Hindrance selectivity was then induced by the accessibility at the small rim site. Indeed, while CO can stabilize Cu(I) at both coordination sites, PPh(3) cannot fit into the cavity and forces Cu(I) to relocate at the large rim. The resulting well-defined symmetrical tetranuclear complex thus arises from the quite remarkable selective supramolecular assembly of nine partners (1 Zn(II), 3 Cu(I), 1 calixarene, 1 guest alkylamine, 3 PPh(3)).


Organic Letters | 2012

Synthesis and Studies of a Water-Soluble and Air-Stable Cu-I/Cu-II Open-Shell Funnel Complex

Grégory Thiabaud; Andrea Brugnara; Michael Carboni; Nicolas Le Poul; Benoit Colasson; Yves Le Mest; Olivia Reinaud

The derivatization of the large rim of a TMPA-capped calix[6]arene (TMPA = tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine) with three trimethylammonium groups enables the water-solubilization of two air-stable Cu(I)/Cu(II) complexes. These two complexes present a vacant coordination site shielded from the aqueous environment by the calixarene core. The spectroscopic and electrochemical data recorded in pure water indicate that the host-guest properties of the funnel complex are retained in both oxidation states of the copper cation.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2013

Guest-Triggered ZnII Translocation and Supramolecular Nuclearity Control in Calix[6]arene-Based Complexes

Nicolas Bernier; Nicolas Menard; Benoit Colasson; Jean-Noël Rebilly; Olivia Reinaud

Two new polytopic ligands based on a calix[6]arene scaffold were synthesized. The truncated cone-shaped calixarene was functionalized at its small rim by a tris-imidazole site, aimed at generating a tetrahedral Zn(II) complex, where a fourth labile site inside the cavity is accessible through the funnel provided by its large rim. Tridentate aza ligands (either two or three) were then grafted at this large rim (the entrance of the cavity). Zn(II) coordination studies, monitored by (1)H NMR spectroscopy, showed unprecedented behavior in this family of heteropolytopic ligands. Indeed, it gives access to complexes of various nuclearities in acetonitrile, where zinc binding is under the supramolecular control of the guest. It is first shown that, in the absence of a good guest donor (a primary amine), Zn(II) binding is favored at the large rim where two tridentate nitrogenous groups can form an octahedral complex. The addition of a long guest such as heptylamine induces the quantitative translocation of the Zn(II) ion from the large rim octahedral (O(h)) site to the small rim tetrahedral (T(d)) site provided by the trisimidazole core and the guest ligand. With 2 equiv of Zn(II), well-defined dinuclear complexes were obtained and isolated, with one Zn(II) ion bound at each rim. Interestingly, it is shown that the binding mode at the large rim is under the supramolecular control of the guest bound at the small rim (with short guests, the O(h) environment is obtained at the large rim, whereas long guests disrupt this core through an induced-fit process); the partially included and dangling alkyl chain opens the large rim (entrance of the cavity) and pushes apart the tridentate moieties. As a result, a guest-induced switch of Zn(II) binding mode occurs and frees one of the tridentate groups from coordination, allowing further extension of the complex nuclearity.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012

Ipso-Nitration of calix[6]azacryptands: intriguing effect of the small rim capping pattern on the large rim substitution selectivity.

Manuel Lejeune; Jean-François Picron; Alice Mattiuzzi; Angélique Lascaux; Stéphane De Cesco; Andrea Brugnara; Grégory Thiabaud; Ulrich Darbost; David Coquière; Benoit Colasson; Olivia Reinaud; Ivan Jabin

The ipso-nitration of calix[6]arene-based molecular receptors is a important synthetic pathway for the elaboration of more sophisticated systems. This reaction has been studied for a variety of capped calixarenes, and a general trend for the regioselective nitration of three aromatic units out of six in moderate to high yield has been observed. This selectivity is, in part, attributed to the electronic connection between the protonated cap at the small rim and the reactive sites at the large rim. In addition, this work highlights the fact that subtle conformational properties can drastically influence the outcome of this reaction.

Collaboration


Dive into the Benoit Colasson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olivia Reinaud

Paris Descartes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicolas Le Poul

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ivan Jabin

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrea Brugnara

Paris Descartes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yves Le Mest

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Grégory Thiabaud

Paris Descartes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicolas Menard

Paris Descartes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olivia Bistri

Paris Descartes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alex Inthasot

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge