Issue 11, 2017

Fluorinated aminoanthranilamides: non-native amino acids for bringing proteomic approaches to charge-transfer systems

Abstract

The ability to control charge transfer at molecular and nanometer scales represents the ultimate level of electronic mastery, and its impacts cannot be overstated. As electrostatic analogues of magnets, electrets possess ordered electric dipoles that present key paradigms for directing transduction of electrons and holes. Herein we describe the design and development of fluorinated aminoanthranilamides, derivatives of non-native aromatic beta-amino acids, as building blocks for hole-transfer molecular electrets. A highly regio-selective nucleophilic aromatic substitution of difluorinated nitrobenzoic acid provides the underpinnings for an array of unprecedented anthranilamide structures. Spin density distribution and electrochemical analyses reveal that fluorine induces about 200 mV positive shifts in reduction potentials without compromising the stability of the oxidized residues, making them invaluable building blocks for hole-transfer systems. These findings open unexplored routes to novel amino-acid structures, setting a foundation for bringing principles of proteomics to designs of charge-transfer systems.

Graphical abstract: Fluorinated aminoanthranilamides: non-native amino acids for bringing proteomic approaches to charge-transfer systems

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Jan 2017
Accepted
20 Feb 2017
First published
20 Feb 2017

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2017,19, 7871-7876

Fluorinated aminoanthranilamides: non-native amino acids for bringing proteomic approaches to charge-transfer systems

J. M. Larsen-Clinton, E. M. Espinoza, M. F. Mayther, J. Clark, C. Tao, D. Bao, C. M. Larino, M. Wurch, S. Lara and V. I. Vullev, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2017, 19, 7871 DOI: 10.1039/C7CP00432J

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