Biological rotary motors can alter their mechanical function by changing the direction of rotary motion. Achieving a similar reversal of direction of rotation in artificial molecular motors presents a fundamental stereochemical challenge: how to change from clockwise to anticlockwise motion without compromising the autonomous unidirectional rotary behaviour of the system. A new molecular motor with multilevel control of rotary motion is reported here, in which the direction of light-powered rotation can be reversed by base-catalysed epimerization. The key steps are deprotonation and reprotonation of the photochemically generated less-stable isomers during the 360° unidirectional rotary cycle, with complete inversion of the configuration at ...
With the long-term goal of producing nanometer-scale machines, we describe here the unidirectional r...
The conversion of chemical energy to drive directional motion at the molecular level allows biologic...
With the long-term goal of producing nanometer-scale machines, we describe here the unidirectional r...
Biological rotary motors can alter their mechanical function by changing the direction of rotary mot...
Insight in the steric and electronic parameters governing isomerization processes in artificial mole...
Insight in the steric and electronic parameters governing isomerization processes in artificial mole...
In this paper we present the smallest artificial light-driven molecular motor consisting of only 28 ...
In this paper we present the smallest artificial light-driven molecular motor consisting of only 28 ...
Synthetic molecular machines hold tremendous potential to revolutionize chemical and materials scien...
Insight in the steric and electronic parameters governing isomerization processes in arti´¬²ªcia...
Symmetric molecular motors based on two overcrowded alkenes with a notable absence of a stereogenic ...
Symmetric molecular motors based on two overcrowded alkenes with a notable absence of a stereogenic ...
A study is presented on the control of rotary motion of an appending rotor unit in a light-driven mo...
Molecular motors convert external energy into directional motions at the nano-scales. To date unidir...
Biological molecular motors translate their local directional motion into ordered movement of other ...
With the long-term goal of producing nanometer-scale machines, we describe here the unidirectional r...
The conversion of chemical energy to drive directional motion at the molecular level allows biologic...
With the long-term goal of producing nanometer-scale machines, we describe here the unidirectional r...
Biological rotary motors can alter their mechanical function by changing the direction of rotary mot...
Insight in the steric and electronic parameters governing isomerization processes in artificial mole...
Insight in the steric and electronic parameters governing isomerization processes in artificial mole...
In this paper we present the smallest artificial light-driven molecular motor consisting of only 28 ...
In this paper we present the smallest artificial light-driven molecular motor consisting of only 28 ...
Synthetic molecular machines hold tremendous potential to revolutionize chemical and materials scien...
Insight in the steric and electronic parameters governing isomerization processes in arti´¬²ªcia...
Symmetric molecular motors based on two overcrowded alkenes with a notable absence of a stereogenic ...
Symmetric molecular motors based on two overcrowded alkenes with a notable absence of a stereogenic ...
A study is presented on the control of rotary motion of an appending rotor unit in a light-driven mo...
Molecular motors convert external energy into directional motions at the nano-scales. To date unidir...
Biological molecular motors translate their local directional motion into ordered movement of other ...
With the long-term goal of producing nanometer-scale machines, we describe here the unidirectional r...
The conversion of chemical energy to drive directional motion at the molecular level allows biologic...
With the long-term goal of producing nanometer-scale machines, we describe here the unidirectional r...