Is the Smallest Molecular Trefoil Knot Actually the Tightest One?

  • Wei Tao Xu
  • , Chenxing Guo
  • , Yefei Jiang
  • , Wei Jian Li
  • , Xiao Qin Xu
  • , Xue Li
  • , Siqi Luo
  • , Lianrui Hu
  • , Xiujun Yu*
  • , Xiaopeng Li
  • , Hai Bo Yang*
  • , Wei Wang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Tightness engineering has evolved as an efficient strategy for the design of knotted, woven, and entangled molecules and materials with desired properties and functions since tightness is a primary parameter that determines the property of a knotted strand. However, as an attractive topic that inspires mathematicians, physicists, chemists, and biologists, whether the smallest knot is exactly the tightest one remains unaddressed experimentally. To tackle this challenge, a series of organic trefoil knots with the backbone-atom as short as 70 have been successfully synthesized by developing a new modular self-assembly approach in this study. To our great surprise, with the help of gradient tandem mass spectrometry, the quantitative tightness evaluation suggested that the molecular trefoil knot with a backbone crossing ratio (BCR) of 24.0 is even tighter than the one with a BCR of 23.3 (i.e., the smallest organic trefoil knot with the shortest ropelength synthesized so far), thus demonstrating an unexpected yet interesting odd-even effect to enhance the understanding of the tightness regulation of molecular knots.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202512327
JournalAngewandte Chemie - International Edition
Volume64
Issue number35
DOIs
StatePublished - 25 Aug 2025

Keywords

  • Gradient tandem mass spectrometry
  • Mechanically interlocked molecules
  • Molecular trefoil knots
  • Odd–even effect
  • Topological chirality

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