From an Insulating Zn-Porphyrin Metallacage to Electrically Conducting Inclusion Complexes Featuring Extended π Donor/Acceptor Stacks

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

Abstract

π-Donor/Acceptor charge-transfer (CT) interactions between redox-complementary π-systems often give rise to non-native optical and electronic properties that are beneficial for modern electronics and energy technologies. However, the formation of extended supramolecular π-donor/acceptor stacks capable of long-range charge transport requires ingenious design strategies that can help reinforce otherwise weak π-donor/acceptor noncovalent interactions. Herein, we demonstrate that a large tetragonal prismatic metal–organic cage (MOC28+) having two parallel π-donor tetrakis(4-carboxyphenyl)-Zn-porphyrin (ZnTCPP) faces located ~14 Å apart can accommodate up to three redox-complementary planar aromatic guests (either three π-acceptor guests or two π-acceptors surrounding one π-donor guest) between the ZnTCPP faces, forming extended π-donor/acceptor stacks. While empty MOC28+ behaves as an insulator due to the lack of charge delocalization across its large cavity, its inclusion complexes saturated with π-acidic HATHCN and HCTP displayed noticeably higher electrical conductivity (8.7 x 10^–6 and 1.3 x 10^–6 S/m, respectively) owing to more facile charge transport through the π-donor/acceptor stacks composed of the π-acidic guests intercalated between the ZnTCPP faces. Thus, this work demonstrated that tetragonal prismatic metallacages with two parallel electroactive faces can help create extended π-donor/acceptor stacks by encapsulating redox-complementary planar guests, which can facilitate through-space charge delocalization, generating non-native electrical conductivity.

Keywords

metallacage
inclusion complex
π-donor/acceptor interaction
charge transfer
electrical conductivity

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