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Double Helical Conformation and Extreme Rigidity in a Rodlike Polyelectrolyte

Authors :
Wang, Ying
He, Yadong
Yu, Zhou
Gao, Jianwei
Brinck, Stephanie T.
Slebodnick, Carla
Fahs, Gregory B.
Zanelotti, Curt J.
Hegde, Maruti
Moore, Robert B.
Ensing, Bernd
Dingemans, Theo J.
Qiao, Rui
Madsen, Louis A.
Source :
Nature Communications, 10, 801, 2019
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The ubiquitous biomacromolecule DNA has an axial rigidity persistence length of ~50 nm, driven by its elegant double helical structure. While double and multiple helix structures appear widely in nature, only rarely are these found in synthetic non-chiral macromolecules. Here we describe a double helical conformation in the densely charged aromatic polyamide poly(2,2'-disulfonyl-4,4'-benzidine terephthalamide) or PBDT. This double helix macromolecule represents one of the most rigid simple molecular structures known, exhibiting an extremely high axial persistence length (~1 micrometer). We present X-ray diffraction, NMR spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations that reveal and confirm the double helical conformation. The discovery of this extreme rigidity in combination with high charge density gives insight into the self-assembly of molecular ionic composites with high mechanical modulus (~1 GPa) yet with liquid-like ion motions inside, and provides fodder for formation of new 1D-reinforced composites.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication by Nature Communications

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Communications, 10, 801, 2019
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1902.00711
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08756-3