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Dive into the research topics where William J. Ramsay is active.

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Featured researches published by William J. Ramsay.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2014

Stereochemistry in Subcomponent Self-Assembly

Ana M. Castilla; William J. Ramsay; Jonathan R. Nitschke

CONSPECTUS: As Pasteur noted more than 150 years ago, asymmetry exists in matter at all organization levels. Biopolymers such as proteins or DNA adopt one-handed conformations, as a result of the chirality of their constituent building blocks. Even at the level of elementary particles, asymmetry exists due to parity violation in the weak nuclear force. While the origin of homochirality in living systems remains obscure, as does the possibility of its connection with broken symmetries at larger or smaller length scales, its centrality to biomolecular structure is clear: the single-handed forms of bio(macro)molecules interlock in ways that depend upon their handednesses. Dynamic artificial systems, such as helical polymers and other supramolecular structures, have provided a means to study the mechanisms of transmission and amplification of stereochemical information, which are key processes to understand in the context of the origins and functions of biological homochirality. Control over stereochemical information transfer in self-assembled systems will also be crucial for the development of new applications in chiral recognition and separation, asymmetric catalysis, and molecular devices. In this Account, we explore different aspects of stereochemistry encountered during the use of subcomponent self-assembly, whereby complex structures are prepared through the simultaneous formation of dynamic coordinative (N → metal) and covalent (N═C) bonds. This technique provides a useful method to study stereochemical information transfer processes within metal-organic assemblies, which may contain different combinations of fixed (carbon) and labile (metal) stereocenters. We start by discussing how simple subcomponents with fixed stereogenic centers can be incorporated in the organic ligands of mononuclear coordination complexes and communicate stereochemical information to the metal center, resulting in diastereomeric enrichment. Enantiopure subcomponents were then incorporated in self-assembly reactions to control the stereochemistry of increasingly complex architectures. This strategy has also allowed exploration of the degree to which stereochemical information is propagated through tetrahedral frameworks cooperatively, leading to the observation of stereochemical coupling across more than 2 nm between metal stereocenters and the enantioselective synthesis of a face-capped tetrahedron containing no carbon stereocenters via a stereochemical memory effect. Several studies on the communication of stereochemistry between the configurationally flexible metal centers in tetrahedral metal-organic cages have shed light on the factors governing this process, allowing the synthesis of an asymmetric cage, obtained in racemic form, in which all symmetry elements have been broken. Finally, we discuss how stereochemical diversity leads to structural complexity in the structures prepared through subcomponent self-assembly. Initial use of octahedral metal templates with facial stereochemistry in subcomponent self-assembly, which predictably gave rise to structures of tetrahedral symmetry, was extended to meridional metal centers. These lower-symmetry linkages have allowed the assembly of a series of increasingly intricate 3D architectures of varying functionality. The knowledge gained from investigating different aspects of the stereochemistry of metal-templated assemblies thus not only leads to new means of structural control but also opens pathways toward functions such as stereoselective guest binding and transformation.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Bidirectional regulation of halide binding in a heterometallic supramolecular cube.

William J. Ramsay; Tanya K. Ronson; Jack K. Clegg; Jonathan R. Nitschke

Complex cubes: In a cationic supramolecular cube, coordinatively unsaturated metal centers in the walls of the host provided binding sites for neutral or negatively charged guests. The binding of an initial guest (CF CO, OPMe, NH, or NMe) either cooperatively enhanced or competitively inhibited the binding of a second guest (halide ion).


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Designed Enclosure Enables Guest Binding Within the 4200 Å3 Cavity of a Self-Assembled Cube†

William J. Ramsay; Filip T. Szczypiński; Haim Weissman; Tanya K. Ronson; Maarten M. J. Smulders; Boris Rybtchinski; Jonathan R. Nitschke

Metal-organic self-assembly has proven to be of great use in constructing structures of increasing size and intricacy, but the largest assemblies lack the functions associated with the ability to bind guests. Here we demonstrate the self-assembly of two simple organic molecules with Cd(II) and Pt(II) into a giant heterometallic supramolecular cube which is capable of binding a variety of mono- and dianionic guests within an enclosed cavity greater than 4200 Å(3) . Its structure was established by X-ray crystallography and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy. This cube is the largest discrete abiological assembly that has been observed to bind guests in solution; cavity enclosure and coulombic effects appear to be crucial drivers of host-guest chemistry at this scale. The degree of cavity occupancy, however, appears less important: the largest guest studied, bound the most weakly, occupying only 11 % of the host cavity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Two Distinct Allosteric Active Sites Regulate Guest Binding Within a Fe8Mo1216+ Cubic Receptor

William J. Ramsay; Jonathan R. Nitschke

The binding of phosphine ligands to molybdenum sites on the faces of a supramolecular cube served to inhibit allosterically the encapsulation of a neutral or anionic guest. The edges of the cube also provided a distinct second allosteric site, where the binding of tetraphenylborate also allosterically inhibited anion binding in the cubes cavity. The two allosteric sites were shown to regulate the binding of an anionic guest either independently or in concert. The use of a tertiary amine as an allosteric effector also enabled a phosphine guest to be ejected from the cubes cavity into solution, to generate phosphine complexes with other metal ions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Subtle Ligand Modification Inverts Guest Binding Hierarchy in MII8L6 Supramolecular Cubes

William J. Ramsay; Felix J. Rizzuto; Tanya K. Ronson; Kenji Caprice; Jonathan R. Nitschke

Zinc(II), a dimolybdenum(II) paddlewheel tetramine A, and 2-formylpyridine self-assembled to generate a cubic Zn(II)8(L(A))6 assembly. The paddlewheel faces of this assembly exhibited two distinct conformations, whereas the analogous Fe(II)8(L(A))6 framework displayed no such perturbation to its structure. This variation in behavior is attributed to the subtle difference in ligand rotational freedom between the Zn(II)- and Fe(II)-cornered cubes. The incorporation of a fluorinated Mo(II)2 paddlewheel, B, into analogous Zn(II)8(L(B))6 and Fe(II)8(L(B))6 structures resulted in changes to the rotational dynamics of the ligands. These differing dynamics perturbed the energies of the frontier orbitals of these structures, as determined through spectroscopic and electrochemical methods. The result of these perturbations was an inversion of the halide binding preference of the Zn(II)8(L(B))6 host as compared to its Zn(II)8(L(A))6 congener, whereas the Fe(II)8(L(B))6 host maintained a similar binding hierarchy to Fe(II)8(L(A))6.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Carbon Dioxide Fixation and Sulfate Sequestration by a Supramolecular Trigonal Bipyramid

Colm Browne; William J. Ramsay; Tanya K. Ronson; John Medley-Hallam; Jonathan R. Nitschke

The subcomponent self-assembly of a bent dialdehyde ligand and different cationic and anionic templates led to the formation of two new metallosupramolecular architectures: a Fe(II) 4 L6 molecular rectangle was isolated following reaction of the ligand with iron(II) tetrafluoroborate, and a M5 L6 trigonal bipyramidal structure was constructed from either zinc(II) tetrafluoroborate or cadmium(II) trifluoromethanesulfonate. The spatially constrained arrangement of the three equatorial metal ions in the M5 L6 structures was found to induce small-molecule transformations. Atmospheric carbon dioxide was fixed as carbonate and bound to the equatorial metal centers in both the Zn5 L6 and Cd5 L6 assemblies, and sulfur dioxide was hydrated and bound as the sulfite dianion in the Zn5 L6 structure. Subsequent in situ oxidation of the sulfite dianion resulted in a sulfate dianion bound within the supramolecular pocket.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Otherwise Unstable Structures Self-Assemble in the Cavities of Cuboctahedral Coordination Cages

Felix J. Rizzuto; William J. Ramsay; Jonathan R. Nitschke

We present a method for the directed self-assembly of interlocked structures and coordination complexes in a set of metal-organic hosts. New homo- and heteroleptic metal complexes-species that cannot be prepared outside-form within the cavities of cuboctahedral coordination cages. When linear bidentate guests and macrocycles are sequentially introduced to the host, a rotaxane is threaded internally; the resulting ternary host-guest complex is a new kind of molecular gyroscope. Tetradentate guests segregate the cavities of these cages into distinct spaces, promoting new stoichiometries and modes of ligand binding to metal ions. The behaviors of bound complexes were observed to alter markedly as a result of confinement: In situ oxidations and spin transitions, neither of which occur ex situ, were both observed to proceed. By providing a tailored space for new modes of coordination-driven self-assembly, the inner phases of cuboctahedral coordination cages provide a new medium for synthetic coordination chemistry.


Chemistry Letters | 2014

Stereochemical Communication within Tetrahedral Capsules

Ana M. Castilla; William J. Ramsay; Jonathan R. Nitschke


Chemical Science | 2015

AuICl-bound N-heterocyclic carbene ligands form MII4(LAuCl)6 integrally gilded cages

William J. Ramsay; Jonathan A. Foster; Katharine L. Moore; Tanya K. Ronson; Raphaël J. Mirgalet; David A. Jefferson; Jonathan R. Nitschke


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Innenrücktitelbild: Designed Enclosure Enables Guest Binding Within the 4200 Å3 Cavity of a Self-Assembled Cube (Angew. Chem. 19/2015)

William J. Ramsay; Filip T. Szczypiński; Haim Weissman; Tanya K. Ronson; Maarten M. J. Smulders; Boris Rybtchinski; Jonathan R. Nitschke

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Boris Rybtchinski

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Haim Weissman

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Maarten M. J. Smulders

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Colm Browne

University of Cambridge

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