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Cucurbituril : ウィキペディア英語版
Cucurbituril

Cucurbiturils are macrocyclic molecules made of glycoluril (=C4H2N4O2=) monomers linked by methylene bridges (-CH2-). The oxygen atoms are located along the edges of the band and are tilted inwards, forming a partly enclosed cavity. The name is derived from the resemblance of this molecule with a pumpkin of the family of Cucurbitaceae.
Cucurbiturils are commonly written as cucurbit()uril, where ''n'' is the number of glycoluril units. Two common abbreviations are CB(), or simply CB''n''.
These compounds are particularly interesting to chemists because they are suitable hosts for an array of neutral and cationic species. The binding mode is thought to occur through hydrophobic interactions, and, in the case of cationic guests, through cation-dipole interactions as well. The dimensions of cucurbiturils are generally on the ~ 10 Å size scale. For instance, the cavity of cucurbit()uril has a height ~ 9.1 Å, an outer diameter ~ 5.8 Å, and an inner diameter ~ 3.9 Å.〔
''Review: The Cucurbit()uril Family'' Jason Lagona, Pritam Mukhopadhyay, Sriparna Chakrabarti, Lyle Isaacs Angewandte Chemie International Edition Volume 44, Issue 31, Pages 4844 - 4870 2005 (Abstract )

Cucurbiturils were first synthesized in 1905 by Behrend, by condensing glycoluril with formaldehyde,〔
''Ueber Condensationsproducte aus Glycoluril und Formaldehyd'', Robert Behrend, Eberhard Meyer, Franz Rusche, Justus Liebig's Annalen der Chemie 1905, 339, 1–37.
〕 but their structure was not elucidated until 1981.〔
''Cucurbituril'' W. A. Freeman, W. L. Mock, and N.-Y. Shih J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1981, 103, 7367. (Article )
〕 To date cucurbiturils composed of 5, 6, 7, 8, and 10 repeat units have all been isolated,〔Cucurbituril Homologues and Derivatives: New Opportunities in Supramolecular Chemistry Acc. Chem. Res., 36 (8), 621 -630, 2003. (ref )〕 which have internal cavity volumes of 82, 164, 279, 479, and 870 Å3 respectively. A cucurbituril composed of 9 repeat units has yet to be isolated (as of 2009). Other common molecular capsules that share a similar molecular shape with cucurbiturils include cyclodextrins, calixarenes, and pillararenes.
== Synthesis==

Cucurbiturils are aminals and synthesized from urea 1 and a dialdehyde (e.g., glyoxal 2) via a nucleophilic addition to give the intermediate glycoluril 3. This intermediate is condensed with formaldehyde to give hexamer cucurbit()uril above 110 °C. Ordinarily, multifunctional monomers such as 3 would undergo a step-growth polymerization that would give a distribution of products, but due to favorable strain and an abundance of hydrogen bonding, the hexamer is the only reaction product isolated after precipitation.〔Cucurbituril Homologues and Derivatives: New Opportunities in Supramolecular Chemistry Acc. Chem. Res., 36 (8), 621 -630, 2003. (ref )〕
Decreasing the temperature of the reaction to between 75 and 90 °C can be used to access other sizes of cucurbiturils including CB(), CB(), CB(), CB(), and CB(). CB() is still the major product; the other ring sizes are formed in smaller yields. The isolation of sizes other than CB() requires fractional crystallization and dissolution. CB(), CB(), CB(), and CB() are all currently commercially available. The larger sizes are a particularly active area of research since they can bind larger and more interesting guest molecules, thus expanding their potential applications.
Cucurbit()uril is particularly difficult to isolate. It was first discovered by Day and coworkers in 2002 as an inclusion complex containing CB() by fractional crystallization of the cucurbituril reaction mixture.〔'' A Cucurbituril-Based Gyroscane: A New Supramolecular Form'' AnthonyI. Day, Rodney J. Blanch, Alan P. Arnold, Susan Lorenzo, Gareth R. Lewis, and Ian Dance Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.; 2002; 41(2) pp 275-277.〕 The CB()•CB() was unambiguously identified by single crystal X-ray structural analysis that revealed the complex resembled a molecular gyroscope. In this case the free rotation of the CB() within the CB() cavity mimics the independent rotation of a flywheel within the frame of a gyroscope.
Isolation of pure CB() could not be accomplished by direct separation methods since the compound has such a high affinity for CB(). The strong binding affinity for the CB() can be understood since it has a complementary size and shape to the cavity of the CB(). Pure CB() was isolated by Isaacs and coworkers in 2005 by introducing a more strongly binding melamine diamine guest that is capable of displacing the CB().〔''Cucurbit()uril'' Simin Liu, Peter Y. Zavalij, and Lyle Isaacs J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 2005; 127(48) pp 16798 - 16799; (Communication) (Abstract )〕 The melamine diamine guest was then separated from the CB() by reaction with acetic anhydride that converted the positively charged amine groups to neutrally charged amides. Cucurbiturils strongly bind cationic guests, but by removing the positive charge from the melamine diamine guest reduces the association constant to the point it can be removed by washing with methanol, DMSO, and water. The CB() has an unusually large cavity (870 Å3) that's free and capable of binding extraordinarily large guests including a cationic calix()arene.

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