Author
Listed:
- Binbin Xu
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
- Dafa Chen
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
- Kaidong Ruan
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
- Ming Luo
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
- Yuanting Cai
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
- Jia Qiu
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
- Wenhao Zhou
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
- Bula Cao
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
- Zhenyang Lin
(The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)
- Jonathan L. Sessler
(The University of Texas at Austin)
- Haiping Xia
(Southern University of Science and Technology)
Abstract
The discovery of ferrocene1 heralded the advent of modern organometallic chemistry. Characterized by the π-coordination of a metal by one or two planar annulene anions, ferrocenes and their analogues2–4 exemplify the archetype of out-of-plane annulene metal complexes. By contrast, the integration of metal within the annulene core to form in-plane annulene metal complexes featuring metal–carbon σ bonds has been obstructed not only by the synthetic difficulty and the non-planarity of annulenes with appropriate internal dimensions, but also by the difficulty of embedding the metal. These challenges have prevented the isolation of such in-plane annulene metal complexes. Here we report the preparation of three metal-centred planar [15]annulene frameworks. The most symmetrical fragment has D5h symmetry, with the metal centre shared by five identical five-membered rings. Density functional theory calculations demonstrate that metal d orbitals participate in conjugation with these five-membered rings, rendering all of them aromatic. The overall framework bears a loose structural and spectroscopic analogy to metallo-expanded porphyrins with multiple aza donors5, which thus provides a nexus between annulene chemistry and classic heteroatom-based coordination chemistry. The present systems display high stability and are easily functionalized. We thus suggest that metal-centred planar annulenes could emerge as promising building blocks for materials science.
Suggested Citation
Binbin Xu & Dafa Chen & Kaidong Ruan & Ming Luo & Yuanting Cai & Jia Qiu & Wenhao Zhou & Bula Cao & Zhenyang Lin & Jonathan L. Sessler & Haiping Xia, 2025.
"Metal-centred planar [15]annulenes,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 641(8061), pages 106-111, May.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:641:y:2025:i:8061:d:10.1038_s41586-025-08841-2
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08841-2
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