Back to Search Start Over

Solvent Molding of Organic Morphologies Made of Supramolecular Chiral Polymers.

Authors :
Đorđević, Luka
Marangoni, Tomas
Miletić, Tanja
Rubio-Magnieto, Jenifer
Mohanraj, John
Amenitsch, Heinz
Pasini, Dario
Liaros, Nikos
Couris, Stelios
Armaroli, Nicola
Surin, Mathieu
Bonifazi, Davide
Source :
Journal of the American Chemical Society. 7/1/2015, Vol. 137 Issue 25, p8150-8160. 11p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The self-assembly and self-organization behavior of uracil-conjugated enantiopure (R)- or (S)-1,T-binaphthyl-2,2'-diol (BINOL) and a hydrophobic oligo(p-phenylene ethynylene) (OPE) chromophore exposing 2,6-di(acetylamino)-pyridine termini are reported. Systematic spectroscopic (UV-vis, CD, fluorescence, NMR, and SAXS) and microscopic studies (TEM and AFM) showed that BINOL and OPE compounds undergo triple H-bonding recognition, generating different organic nanostructures in solution. Depending on the solvophobic properties of the liquid media (toluene, CHCl3, CHCl3/CHX, and CHX/THF), spherical, rod-like, fibrous, and helical morphologies were obtained, with the latter being the only nanostructures expressing chirality at the microscopic level. SAXS analysis combined with molecular modeling simulations showed that the helical superstructures are composed of dimeric double-cable tape-like structures that, in turn, are supercoiled at the microscale. This behavior is interpreted as a consequence of an interplay among the degree of association of the H-bonded recognition, the vapor pressure of the solvent, and the solvophobic/solvophilic character of the supramolecular adducts in the different solutions under static and dynamic conditions, namely solvent evaporation conditions at room temperature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00027863
Volume :
137
Issue :
25
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108464166
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b02448