Chiral Amplification of Dynamic Helical Polymers through 1:1 Host-Guest Interactions: Theoretical Models for Majority Rule and Sergeants and Soldiers Effects

24 February 2025, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Chiral amplification is one of the distinctive phenomena of dynamic helical polymers whose helical sense excess is remarkably enhanced with a small amount of chiral units through the strong cooperative interactions among the monomer units. The Ising model for the chiral amplification of the dynamic helical copolymers bearing the chiral side chains has been well-established. However, the theoretical models have not yet been developed for the chiral amplification of the dynamic helical polymers induced by noncovalent intermolecular (host-guest) interactions of the achiral side chains with the chiral/chiral (majority rule effect) and chiral/achiral (sergeants and soldiers effect) guest molecules. In this work, we propose the theoretical models for two types of 1:1 host-guest interactions: the majority rule effect type 1:1 host-guest interaction (MRHG) and sergeants and soldiers effect type 1:1 host-guest interaction (SSHG) models, in which each twisting unit of the dynamic helical polymers is assumed to interact with one guest molecule. The excess energy of the helical reversal state, per unit energy favoring one helical state over the other, and enantioselectivity can be effectively determined using the MRHG model. Moreover, it was revealed that the chiral solvation model reported by Green, Morawetz, and co-workers is a particular solution of the SSHG model.

Keywords

chiral
host-guest
supramolecule
helix
circular dichroism
binding constant
equilibrium constant
molecular recognition
non-covalent interactions
chiral amplification
Ising model

Supplementary materials

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