Publication | Open Access
A Competing Hydrogen Bonding Pattern to Yield a Thermo‐Thickening Supramolecular Polymer
33
Citations
46
References
2019
Year
Materials ScienceSupramolecular AssemblyPathway ComplexityEngineeringThermo‐thickening Supramolecular PolymerSelf-assemblyPolymer ScienceHydrogen BondPhysical ChemistryChemistryHydrogen BondingSupramolecular ChemistryMolecular PolymerSupramolecular PolymerPolymer ChemistryPolymers
Introduction of competing interactions in the design of a supramolecular polymer (SP) creates pathway complexity. Ester-bis-ureas contain both a strong bis-urea sticker that is responsible for the build-up of long rod-like objects by hydrogen bonding and ester groups that can interfere with this main pattern in a subtle way. Spectroscopic (FTIR and CD), calorimetric (DSC), and scattering (SANS) techniques show that such ester-bis-ureas self-assemble into three competing rod-like SPs. The previously unreported low-temperature SP is stabilized by hydrogen bonds between the interfering ester groups and the urea moieties. It also features a weak macroscopic alignment of the rods. The other structures form isotropic dispersions of rods stabilized by the more classical urea-urea hydrogen bonding pattern. The transition from the low-temperature structure to the next occurs reversibly by heating and is accompanied by an increase in viscosity, a rare feature for solutions in hydrocarbons.
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