Cyanostar binds anions through hydrogen bonding from the C–H bonds, as the hydrogen has a positive electrostatic potential. It is the first binder to make use of cyanostilbene's electropositiveCH groups. The CH bonds create an electropositive region in the center of the macrocycle, creating a binding pocket. Cyanostar strongly binds anions that usually can only be bound weakly. The increased binding arises from the formation of a 2:1 complex, with two cyanostars sandwiching the anion on each side. An extended version of this structural pattern is a 4:3 alternating stack of cyanostar molecules complexing a hydrogen-bonded chain of dihydrogen phosphate units.