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Tetrahedral Arrangements of Perylene Bisimide Columns via Supramolecular Orientational Memory.

Dipankar SahooMihai PetercaEmad AqadBenjamin E PartridgePaul A HeineyRobert GrafHans W SpiessXiangbing ZengVirgil Percec
Published in: ACS nano (2017)
Chiral, shape, and liquid crystalline memory effects are well-known to produce commercial macroscopic materials with important applications as springs, sensors, displays, and memory devices. A supramolecular orientational memory effect that provides complex nanoscale arrangements was only recently reported. This supramolecular orientational memory was demonstrated to preserve the molecular orientation and packing within supramolecular units of a self-assembling cyclotriveratrylene crown at the nanoscale upon transition between its columnar hexagonal and Pm3̅n cubic periodic arrays. Here we report the discovery of supramolecular orientational memory in a dendronized perylene bisimide (G2-PBI) that self-assembles into tetrameric crowns and subsequently self-organizes into supramolecular columns and spheres. This supramolecular orientation memory upon transition between columnar hexagonal and body-centered cubic (BCC) mesophases preserves the 3-fold cubic [111] orientations rather than the 4-fold [100] axes, generating an unusual tetrahedral arrangement of supramolecular columns. These results indicate that the supramolecular orientational memory concept may be general for periodic arrays of self-assembling dendrons and dendrimers as well as for other periodic and quasiperiodic nanoscale organizations comprising supramolecular spheres, generated from other organized complex soft matter including block copolymers and surfactants.
Keyphrases
  • water soluble
  • working memory
  • energy transfer
  • small molecule
  • risk assessment
  • ionic liquid
  • air pollution
  • atomic force microscopy
  • heavy metals
  • mass spectrometry