Login / Signup

From Photoinduced Supramolecular Polymerization to Responsive Organogels.

Fan XuLukas PfeiferStefano CrespiFranco King-Chi LeungMarc C A StuartSander J WezenbergBen L Feringa
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2021)
Controlling supramolecular polymerization by external stimuli holds great potential toward the development of responsive soft materials and manipulating self-assembly at the nanoscale. Photochemical switching offers the prospect of regulating the structure and properties of systems in a noninvasive and reversible manner with spatial and temporal control. In addition, this approach will enhance our understanding of supramolecular polymerization mechanisms; however, the control of molecular assembly by light remains challenging. Here we present photoresponsive stiff-stilbene-based bis-urea monomers whose trans isomers readily form supramolecular polymers in a wide range of organic solvents, enabling fast light-triggered depolymerization-polymerization and reversible gel formation. Due to the stability of the cis isomers and the high photostationary states (PSS) of the cis-trans isomerization, precise control over supramolecular polymerization and in situ gelation could be achieved with short response times. A detailed study on the temperature-dependent and photoinduced supramolecular polymerization in organic solvents revealed a kinetically controlled nucleation-elongation mechanism. By application of a Volta phase plate to enhance the phase-contrast method in cryo-EM, unprecedented for nonaqueous solutions, uniform nanofibers were observed in organic solvents.
Keyphrases
  • water soluble
  • energy transfer
  • ionic liquid
  • cancer therapy
  • mass spectrometry
  • electron transfer
  • drug delivery
  • current status
  • single molecule
  • high resolution
  • climate change