Automated Structural Activity Screening of β‐Diketonate Assemblies with High‐Throughput Ion Mobility‐Mass Spectrometry

Author:

Williams Oscar H. Lloyd1ORCID,Rusli Olivia1ORCID,Ezzedinloo Lida1ORCID,Dodgen Tyren M.2ORCID,Clegg Jack K.3ORCID,Rijs Nicole J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemistry UNSW Sydney Sydney NSW, 2052 Australia

2. Waters Corporation Australia Rydalmere NSW, 2116 Australia

3. School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences The University of Queensland St Lucia, Queensland 4072 Australia

Abstract

AbstractEmbracing complexity in design, metallo‐supramolecular self‐assembly presents an opportunity for fabricating materials of economic significance. The array of accessible supramolecules is alluring, along with favourable energy requirements. Implementation is hampered by an inability to efficiently characterise complex mixtures. The stoichiometry, size, shape, guest binding properties and reactivity of individual components and combinations thereof are inherently challenging to resolve. A large combinatorial library of four transition metals (Fe, Cu, Ni and Zn), and six β‐diketonate ligands at different molar ratios and pH was robotically prepared and directly analysed over multiple timepoints with electrospray ionisation travelling wave ion mobility‐mass spectrometry. The dataset was parsed for self‐assembling activity without first attempting to structurally assign individual species. Self‐assembling systems were readily categorised without manual data‐handling, allowing efficient screening of self‐assembly activity. This workflow clarifies solution phase supramolecular assembly processes without manual, bottom‐up processing. The complex behaviour of the self‐assembling systems was reduced to simpler qualities, which could be automatically processed.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Chemistry,Catalysis

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