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An isolated water droplet in the aqueous solution of a supramolecular tetrahedral cage
Authors:Federico Sebastiani  Trandon A Bender  Simone Pezzotti  Wan-Lu Li  Gerhard Schwaab  Robert G Bergman  Kenneth N Raymond  F Dean Toste  Teresa Head-Gordon  Martina Havenith
Institution:aLehrstuhl für Physikalische Chemie II, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, 44780 Bochum, Germany;bChemical Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720-1460;cDepartment of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720-1460;dPitzer Center for Theoretical Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720-1460
Abstract:Water under nanoconfinement at ambient conditions has exhibited low-dimensional ice formation and liquid–solid phase transitions, but with structural and dynamical signatures that map onto known regions of water’s phase diagram. Using terahertz (THz) absorption spectroscopy and ab initio molecular dynamics, we have investigated the ambient water confined in a supramolecular tetrahedral assembly, and determined that a dynamically distinct network of 9 ± 1 water molecules is present within the nanocavity of the host. The low-frequency absorption spectrum and theoretical analysis of the water in the Ga4L612− host demonstrate that the structure and dynamics of the encapsulated droplet is distinct from any known phase of water. A further inference is that the release of the highly unusual encapsulated water droplet creates a strong thermodynamic driver for the high-affinity binding of guests in aqueous solution for the Ga4L612− supramolecular construct.

Supramolecular capsules create internal cavities that are thought to act like enzyme active sites (1). As aqueous enzymes provide inspiration for the design of supramolecular catalysts, one of the goals of supramolecular chemistry is the creation of synthetic “receptors” that have both a high affinity and a high selectivity for the binding of guests in water (2, 3). The Ga4L612− tetrahedral assembly formulated by Raymond and coworkers represents an excellent example of a water-soluble supramolecular cage that has provided host interactions that promotes guest encapsulation. Using steric interactions and electrostatic charge to chemically position the substrate while shielding the reaction from solvent, this host has been shown to provide enhanced reaction rates that approach the performance of natural biocatalysts (410). Moreover, aqueous solvation of the substrate, host, and encapsulated solvent also play an important role in the whole catalytic cycle. In particular, the driving forces that release water from the nanocage host to favor the direct binding with the substrate is thought to be a critical factor in successful catalysis, but is challenging to probe directly (7, 8, 1114).In both natural and artificial nanometer-sized environments, confined water displays uniquely modified structure and dynamics with respect to the bulk liquid (1518). Recently, these modified properties were also found to have significant implications for the mechanism and energetics of reactions taking place in confined water with respect to those observed in bulk aqueous solution (1921). In a pioneering study on supramolecular assemblies, Cram and collaborators (22) concluded that the interior of those cages is a “new and unique phase of matter” for the incarcerated guests. In more recent studies, it was postulated that, similar to graphitic and zeolite nanopores (23, 24), confined water within supramolecular host cavities is organized in stable small clusters (H2O)n, with n = 8 to 19] that are different from gas phase water clusters (25). In these studies, the hydrogen-bonded water clusters were reported to be mostly ice- or clathrate-like by X-ray and neutron diffraction in the solid state at both ambient and cryogenic temperatures (2632). However, to the best of our knowledge, such investigations have not characterized the Ga4L612− supramolecular tetrahedral assembly in the liquid state near room temperature and pressure, where the Ga4L6]12− capsule can perform catalytic reactions (6, 8, 9).Here, we use terahertz (THz) absorption spectroscopy and ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) to characterize low-frequency vibrations and structural organization of water in the nanoconfined environment. THz is ideally suited to probe the intermolecular collective dynamics of the water hydrogen bond (HB) network with extremely high sensitivity, as illustrated for different phases of water (3338), and for aqueous solutions of salts, osmolytes, alcohols, and amino acids (36, 3942). The THz spectra of the water inside the nanocage has been quantitatively reproduced with AIMD, allowing us to confidently characterize the water network in the cage in order to provide a more complete dynamical, structural, and thermodynamic picture. We have determined that the spectroscopic signature of the confined water in the nanocage is a dynamically arrested state whose structure bears none of the features of water at any alternate thermodynamic state point such as pressurized liquid or ice. Our experimental and theoretical study provides insight into the role played by encapsulated water in supramolecular catalysis, creating a low entropy and low enthalpy water droplet readily displaced by a catalytic substrate.
Keywords:supramolecular  encapsulation  THz spectroscopy  ab initio molecular dynamics  confined water
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