Calixarene

A calixarene is a macrocycle or cyclic oligomer based on a hydroxyalkylation product of a phenol and an aldehyde. The word calixarene is derived from calix or chalice because this type of molecule resembles a vase and from the word arene that refers to the aromatic building block. Calixarenes have hydrophobic cavities that can hold smaller molecules or ions and belong to the class of cavitands known in host-guest chemistry. Calixarene nomenclature is straightforward and involves counting the number of repeating units in the ring and include it in the name. A calixarene has 4 units in the ring and a calixarene has 6. A substituent in the meso position Rb is added to the name with a prefix C- as in C-methylcalixarene.

Read more about Calixarene:  Synthesis, Structure, History, Host Guest Interactions, Molecular Self-assembly, Applications, Inherent Chirality