Christoph A. Schalley
| After chemistry studies at the University of Freiburg and the Technical University of Berlin, Christoph A. Schalley received his PhD with Prof. Helmut Schwarz at the Technical University Berlin, being trained in mass spectrometry and gas-phase chemistry. In particular, he worked on metal-catalyzed oxygen transfer reactions of peroxides and the generation of elusive reaction intermediates by neutralization-reionization mass spectrometry with water oxide being one of the highlights. His PhD thesis was followed by a postdoctorate supported by a fellowship from the Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina with Professor Julius Rebek, Jr. at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, where he studied supramolecular capsules under environment-free conditions in the high vacuum of a mass spectrometer. Returning to Germany for his habilitation with Prof. Fritz Vögtle, Christoph Schalley started his independent career in the field of rotaxane chemistry. Meanwhile, his research covers not only rotaxanes and supramolecular gas-phase chemistry, but also the thermodynamic analysis of multivalent and cooperative binding, stimuli-responsive materials such as switchable gels and the generation of surfaces covered with mono- and multilayers of switchable rotaxanes. Christoph Schalley has co-authored more than 200 publications and edited eight books. For his work in the mass spectrometry and gas-phase chemistry of non-covalent complexes, he was awarded the Mattauch-Herzog Prize from the German Society for Mass Spectrometry in 2006. Since 2016, he has been a fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry. Besides research, Christoph Schalley loves to teach and has been awarded with the Excellence-in-Teaching Award of the FU Berlin chemistry students twice in 2008 and 2014. Christoph Schalley has contributed to different fields in supramolecular chemistry. He was among those mass spectrometrists who popularized the investigation of non-covalent complexes under the environment-free conditions inside the high vacuum of a mass spectrometer. Beyond the analytical characterization, these studies offer unique insight into reaction mechanisms within supramolecular complexes, because the dynamic exchange processes that are often observed between the complexes in solution are completely suppressed and intramolecular reactivity is instead seen. Thus, the mobility of crown ethers along oligolysine peptides or on the periphery of POPAM dendrimers can be observed as well as cage contraction processes that do not occur in solution. In solution, the Schalley group investigated self-sorting phenomena and introduced the concept of integrative self-sorting, which allows the programming of larger assemblies that are formed from different building blocks. In such a case, kinetic path selection can often be observed, even though the final product eventually forms under thermodynamic control. Also, the analysis of multivalency effects and the importance of chelate cooperativity has been an important research topic in the Schalley group. More recently, the focus of the group has shifted more towards gels and supramolecular polymers on one side and surface chemistry on the other. Multistimuli-responsive gels have been prepared based on which a variety of logic gates can be implemented. Also, a very simple approach towards superhydrophobic and slippery, liquid-infused porous surfaces has been reported, which uses the deposition of supramolecular gels with perfluorinated side chains on glass surfaces. On gold, mono- and multilayers of chemically switchable rotaxanes show concerted switching between two clearly distinguishable states. |