Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.125, No.16, 4831-4835, 2003
Self-sorting: The exception or the rule?
In this paper, we pose the question of whether self-sorting in designed systems is exceptional behavior or whether it is likely to become a more general phenomenon governing molecular recognition and self-assembly. To address this question we prepared a mixture comprising two of Davis' self-assembled ionophores, Rebek's tennis ball and calixarene tetraurea capsule, Meijer's ureidopyrimidinone, Reinhoudt's calixarene bis(rosefte), and two molecular clips in CDCl3 solution and observed the behavior of this ensemble by H-1 NMR. As hypothesized, high-fidelity self-sorting behavior was observed. The influence of several key variables-temperature, concentration, equilibrium constants, and the presence of competitors-on the fidelity of self-sorting is described. These results show that self-sorting is neither the exception nor the rule. They suggest, however, that the subset of known molecular aggregates that exceed the criteria required for thermodynamic self-sorting is larger than previously appreciated and potentially quite broad.