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Featured researches published by Chuyang Cheng.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

An artificial molecular pump

Chuyang Cheng; Paul R. McGonigal; Severin T. Schneebeli; Hao Li; Nicolaas A. Vermeulen; Chenfeng Ke; J. Fraser Stoddart

Carrier proteins consume fuel in order to pump ions or molecules across cell membranes, creating concentration gradients. Their control over diffusion pathways, effected entirely through noncovalent bonding interactions, has inspired chemists to devise artificial systems that mimic their function. Here, we report a wholly artificial compound that acts on small molecules to create a gradient in their local concentration. It does so by using redox energy and precisely organized noncovalent bonding interactions to pump positively charged rings from solution and ensnare them around an oligomethylene chain, as part of a kinetically trapped entanglement. A redox-active viologen unit at the heart of a dumbbell-shaped molecular pump plays a dual role, first attracting and then repelling the rings during redox cycling, thereby enacting a flashing energy ratchet mechanism with a minimalistic design. Our artificial molecular pump performs work repetitively for two cycles of operation and drives rings away from equilibrium toward a higher local concentration.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Electron Sharing and Anion–π Recognition in Molecular Triangular Prisms

Severin T. Schneebeli; Marco Frasconi; Zhichang Liu; Yilei Wu; Daniel M. Gardner; Nathan L. Strutt; Chuyang Cheng; Raanan Carmieli; Michael R. Wasielewski; J. Fraser Stoddart

Stacking on a full belly: Triangular molecular prisms display electron sharing among their triangularly arranged naphthalenediimide (NDI) redox centers. Their electron-deficient cavities encapsulate linear triiodide anions, leading to the formation of supramolecular helices in the solid state. Chirality transfer is observed from the six chiral centers of the filled prisms to the single-handed helices.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Pillar[5]arene as a Co-Factor in Templating Rotaxane Formation

Chenfeng Ke; Nathan L. Strutt; Hao Li; Xisen Hou; Karel J. Hartlieb; Paul R. McGonigal; Zhidong Ma; Julien Iehl; Charlotte L. Stern; Chuyang Cheng; Zhixue Zhu; Nicolaas A. Vermeulen; Thomas J. Meade; Youssry Y. Botros; J. Fraser Stoddart

After the manner in which coenzymes often participate in the binding of substrates in the active sites of enzymes, pillar[5]arene, a macrocycle containing five hydroquinone rings linked through their para positions by methylene bridges, modifies the binding properties of cucurbit[6]uril, such that the latter templates azide-alkyne cycloadditions that do not occur in the presence of only the cucurbit[6]uril, a macrocycle composed of six glycoluril residues doubly linked through their nitrogen atoms to each other by methylene groups. Here, we describe how a combination of pillar[5]arene and cucurbit[6]uril interacts cooperatively with bipyridinium dications substituted on their nitrogen atoms with 2-azidoethyl- to 5-azidopentyl moieties to afford, as a result of orthogonal templation, two [4]rotaxanes and one [5]rotaxane in >90% yields inside 2 h at 55 °C in acetonitrile. Since the hydroxyl groups on pillar[5]arene and the carbonyl groups on cucurbit[6]uril form hydrogen bonds readily, these two macrocycles work together in a cooperative fashion to the extent that the four conformational isomers of pillar[5]arene can be trapped on the dumbbell components of the [4]rotaxanes. In the case of the [5]rotaxane, it is possible to isolate a compound containing two pillar[5]arene rings with local C5 symmetries. In addition to fixing the stereochemistries of the pillar[5]arene rings, the regiochemistries associated with the 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions have been extended in their constitutional scope. Under mild conditions, orthogonal recognition motifs have been shown to lead to templation with positive cooperativity that is fast and all but quantitative, as well as being green and efficient.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Relative Unidirectional Translation in an Artificial Molecular Assembly Fueled by Light

Hao Li; Chuyang Cheng; Paul R. McGonigal; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Marco Frasconi; Wei-Guang Liu; Zhixue Zhu; Yanli Zhao; Chenfeng Ke; Juying Lei; Ryan M. Young; Scott M. Dyar; Dick T. Co; Ying-Wei Yang; Youssry Y. Botros; William A. Goddard; Michael R. Wasielewski; R. Dean Astumian; J. Fraser Stoddart

Motor molecules present in nature convert energy inputs, such as a chemical fuel or incident photons of light, into directed motion and force biochemical systems away from thermal equilibrium. The ability not only to control relative movements of components in molecules but also to drive their components preferentially in one direction relative to each other using versatile stimuli is one of the keys to future technological applications. Herein, we describe a wholly synthetic small-molecule system that, under the influence of chemical reagents, electrical potential, or visible light, undergoes unidirectional relative translational motion. Altering the redox state of a cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) ring simultaneously (i) inverts the relative heights of kinetic barriers presented by the two termini--one a neutral 2-isopropylphenyl group and the other a positively charged 3,5-dimethylpyridinium unit--of a constitutionally asymmetric dumbbell, which can impair the threading/dethreading of a [2]pseudorotaxane, and (ii) controls the rings affinity for a 1,5-dioxynaphthalene binding site located in the dumbbells central core. The formation and subsequent dissociation of the [2]pseudorotaxane by passage of the ring over the neutral and positively charged termini of the dumbbell component in one, and only one, direction relatively defined has been demonstrated by (i) spectroscopic ((1)H NMR and UV/vis) means and cyclic voltammetry as well as with (ii) DFT calculations and by (iii) comparison with control compounds in the shape of constitutionally symmetrical [2]pseudorotaxanes, one with two positively charged ends and the other with two neutral ends. The operation of the system relies solely on reversible, yet stable, noncovalent bonding interactions. Moreover, in the presence of a photosensitizer, visible-light energy is the only fuel source that is needed to drive the unidirectional molecular translation, making it feasible to repeat the operation numerous times without the buildup of byproducts.


ChemPhysChem | 2016

Wholly Synthetic Molecular Machines

Chuyang Cheng; J. Fraser Stoddart

The past quarter of a century has witnessed an increasing engagement on the part of physicists and chemists in the design and synthesis of molecular machines de novo. This minireview traces the development of artificial molecular machines from their prototypes in the form of shuttles and switches to their emergence as motors and pumps where supplies of energy in the form of chemical fuel, electrochemical potential and light activation become a minimum requirement for them to function away from equilibrium. The challenge facing this rapidly growing community of scientists and engineers today is one of putting wholly synthetic molecules to work, both individually and as collections. Here, we highlight some of the recent conceptual and practical advances relating to the operation of wholly synthetic rotary and linear motors.


Chemical Communications | 2014

Efficient syntheses of pillar[6]arene-based hetero[4]rotaxanes using a cooperative capture strategy

Xisen Hou; Chenfeng Ke; Chuyang Cheng; Nan Song; Anthea K. Blackburn; Amy A. Sarjeant; Youssry Y. Botros; Ying-Wei Yang; J. Fraser Stoddart

While a single pillar[6]arene ring, nestling between two cucurbit[6]uril rings in a series of three hetero[4]rotaxanes, is conformationally mobile in solution, it adopts the energetically most favourable conformation with local C3V symmetry in the solid state.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Energetically Demanding Transport in a Supramolecular Assembly

Chuyang Cheng; Paul R. McGonigal; Wei Guang Liu; Hao Li; Nicolaas A. Vermeulen; Chenfeng Ke; Marco Frasconi; Charlotte L. Stern; William A. Goddard; J. Fraser Stoddart

A challenge in contemporary chemistry is the realization of artificial molecular machines that can perform work in solution on their environments. Here, we report on the design and production of a supramolecular flashing energy ratchet capable of processing chemical fuel generated by redox changes to drive a ring in one direction relative to a dumbbell toward an energetically uphill state. The kinetics of the reaction pathway juxtapose a low energy [2]pseudorotaxane that forms under equilibrium conditions with a high energy, metastable [2]pseudorotaxane which resides away from equilibrium.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Epitaxial Growth of γ-Cyclodextrin-Containing Metal–Organic Frameworks Based on a Host–Guest Strategy

Dengke Shen; Gang Wang; Zhichang Liu; Peng Li; Kang Cai; Chuyang Cheng; Yi Shi; Ji-Min Han; Chung-Wei Kung; Xirui Gong; Qing-Hui Guo; Hongliang Chen; Andrew C.-H. Sue; Youssry Y. Botros; Antonio Facchetti; Omar K. Farha; Tobin J. Marks; J. Fraser Stoddart

A class of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs)-namely CD-MOFs-obtained from natural products has been grown in an epitaxial fashion as films on the surfaces of glass substrates, which are modified with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of γ-cyclodextrin (γ-CD) molecules. The SAMs are created by host-guest complexation of γ-CD molecules with surface-functionalized pyrene units. The CD-MOF films have continuous polycrystalline morphology with a structurally out-of-plane ( c-axial) orientation, covering an area of several square millimeters, with a thickness of ∼2 μm. Furthermore, this versatile host-guest strategy has been applied successfully in the growth of CD-MOFs as the shell on the curved surface of microparticles as well as in the integration of CD-MOF films into electrochemical devices for sensing carbon dioxide. In striking contrast to the control devices prepared from CD-MOF crystalline powders, these CD-MOF film-based devices display an enhancement in proton conductance of up to 300-fold. In addition, the CD-MOF film-based device exhibits more rapid and highly reversible CO2-sensing cycles under ambient conditions, with a 50-fold decrease in conductivity upon exposure to CO2 for 3 s which is recovered within 10 s upon re-exposure to air.


Archive | 2015

Chapter 12:Pillararene-related Macrocycles

Severin T. Schneebeli; Nathan L. Strutt; Chuyang Cheng; J. Fraser Stoddart

Comprised of a [1n]paracyclophane framework, the backbones of pillararenes are among the most general and versatile building blocks in supramolecular chemistry. With the right type of substitution, the structural, electronic, optical, and supramolecular binding properties of such macrocycles can be fine-tuned, leading to a wealth of potential applications which include (i) the creation of molecular magnets, (ii) selective sensing of biologically relevant guests, (iii) cleanup of nuclear waste, and (iv) gas adsorption and storage, in addition to (v) the controlled synthesis of metal-directed or covalent nanotubes. This chapter presents several pillararene-related compounds, which encompass heteroatom-bridged [1n]cyclophanes, collarenes, cyclic iptycenes, asararenes, and amino-substituted pillararenes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Redox Switchable Daisy Chain Rotaxanes Driven by Radical-Radical Interactions

Carson J. Bruns; Marco Frasconi; Julien Iehl; Karel J. Hartlieb; Severin T. Schneebeli; Chuyang Cheng; Samuel I. Stupp; J. Fraser Stoddart

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Chenfeng Ke

Northwestern University

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Hao Li

Northwestern University

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