Triazole: a unique building block for the construction of functional materials.
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2011-05-09
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR: 1.037
CiteScore: 7.4
Impact factor: 4.2
ISSN: 13597345, 1364548X
PubMed ID:
21556388
Materials Chemistry
Metals and Alloys
Surfaces, Coatings and Films
General Chemistry
Ceramics and Composites
Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Catalysis
Abstract
Over the past 50 years, numerous roads towards carbon-based materials have been explored, all of them being paved using mainly one functional group as the brick: acetylene. The acetylene group, or the carbon-carbon triple bond, is one of the oldest and simplest functional groups in chemistry, and although not present in any of the naturally occurring carbon allotropes, it is an essential tool to access their synthetic carbon-rich family. In general, two strategies towards the synthesis of π-conjugated carbon-rich structures can be employed: (a) either the acetylene group serves as a building block to access acetylene-derived structures or (b) it serves as a synthetic tool to provide other, usually benzenoid, structures. The recently discovered copper-catalysed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) reaction, however, represents a new powerful alternative: it transforms the acetylene group into a five-membered heteroaromatic 1H-1,2,3-triazole (triazole) ring and this gives rise to new opportunities. Compared with all-carbon aromatic non-functional rings, the triazole ring possesses three nitrogen atoms and, thus, can serve as a ligand to coordinate metals, or as a hydrogen bond acceptor and donor. This Feature Article summarises examples of using the triazole ring to construct conjugation- and/or function-related heteroaromatic materials, such as tuneable multichromophoric covalent ensembles, macrocyclic receptors or responsive foldamers. These recent examples, which open a new sub-field within organic materials, started to appear only few years ago and represent "a few more bricks" on the road to carbon-rich functional materials.
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Total citations:
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Citations from 2024:
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Juríček M., Kouwer P. H., Rowan A. Triazole: a unique building block for the construction of functional materials. // Chemical Communications. 2011. Vol. 47. No. 31. p. 8740.
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Juríček M., Kouwer P. H., Rowan A. Triazole: a unique building block for the construction of functional materials. // Chemical Communications. 2011. Vol. 47. No. 31. p. 8740.
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1039/c1cc10685f
UR - https://doi.org/10.1039/c1cc10685f
TI - Triazole: a unique building block for the construction of functional materials.
T2 - Chemical Communications
AU - Juríček, Michal
AU - Kouwer, Paul H.J.
AU - Rowan, Alan
PY - 2011
DA - 2011/05/09
PB - Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
SP - 8740
IS - 31
VL - 47
PMID - 21556388
SN - 1359-7345
SN - 1364-548X
ER -
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BibTex (up to 50 authors)
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@article{2011_Juríček,
author = {Michal Juríček and Paul H.J. Kouwer and Alan Rowan},
title = {Triazole: a unique building block for the construction of functional materials.},
journal = {Chemical Communications},
year = {2011},
volume = {47},
publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)},
month = {may},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1039/c1cc10685f},
number = {31},
pages = {8740},
doi = {10.1039/c1cc10685f}
}
Cite this
MLA
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Juríček, Michal, et al. “Triazole: a unique building block for the construction of functional materials..” Chemical Communications, vol. 47, no. 31, May. 2011, p. 8740. https://doi.org/10.1039/c1cc10685f.