RESUMEN
For the construction of hierarchical superstructures with biaxial anisotropic absorption, a newly synthesized diacetylene-functionalized bipyridinium is self-assembled to use an electron-accepting host for capturing and arranging guests. The formation of the donor-acceptor complex triggers an intermolecular charge transfer, leading to chromophore activation. Polarization-dependent multichroic thin films are prepared through a sequential process of single-coating, self-assembly, and topochemical polymerization of host-guest chromophores. Molecular packing structures constructed in the single-layer optical thin film possess orthogonal absorption axes for two different wavelengths. By tuning the linear polarization angle, the color of the optical thin film can be intentionally controlled. This single-layered multichroic film provides a new pathway for the development of anticounterfeiting and multiplexing encryptions.
RESUMEN
2D nanomaterials with ångström-scale thicknesses offer a unique platform for confining molecules at an unprecedentedly small scale, presenting novel opportunities for modulating material properties and probing microscopic phenomena. In this study, mesogen-tethered polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (POSS) amphiphiles with varying numbers of mesogenic tails to systematically influence molecular self-assembly and the architecture of the ensuing supramolecular structures, are synthesized. These organic-inorganic hybrid amphiphiles facilitate precise spatial arrangement and directional alignment of the primary molecular units within highly ordered supramolecular structures. The correlation between molecular design and the formation of superlattices through comprehensive structural analyses, incorporating molecular thermodynamics and kinetics, is explored. The distinct intermolecular interactions of the POSS core and the mesogenic tails drive the preferential formation of a 2D inorganic sublattice while simultaneously guiding the hierarchical assembly of organic lamellae via soft epitaxy. The findings reveal the intricate balance between shape, size, and interaction strengths of the inorganic and organic components, and how these factors collectively influence the structural hierarchy of the superstructures, which consist of multiple sublattices. By controlling this unique molecular behavior, it is possible to modulate or maximize the anisotropy of optical, mechanical, and electrical properties at the sub-nanometer scale for nanotechnology applications.
RESUMEN
The construction of fullerene (C60 ) hierarchical nanostructures with the help of amphiphilic molecules remains a challenging task in nanoscience and nanotechnology. Utilizing the host-guest complex concept, sub-10 nm layered superstructures are constructed from a monofunctionalized C60 dendron (C60 D, guest) and tweezer-like pyrene dendron (PD, host). Since C60 D and PD are asymmetric shape amphiphiles having liquid crystal (LC) dendrons, both C60 D and PD construct head-to-head bilayer superstructures by themselves. From fluorescence titration experiments, it is realized that the host-guest complex shows 1:1 stoichiometric binding with a binding constant (Ksv = 2.45 × 105 m-1 ). Based on the morphological observations and scattering analyses, it is found that buckle-like asymmetric building blocks (C60 D·PD) are self-assembled by the host-guest complex and construct multilayer hybrid nanostructures. The hierarchical hybrid nanostructures consist of the self-assembled C60 D·PD bilayer with a 2D C60 ·P nanoarray sandwiched between LC dendrons. This advanced strategy is expected to be a practicable and rational guideline for the fabrication of programmed hierarchical hybrid nanostructures.
RESUMEN
To understand the relationship between kinetically controlled hierarchical superstructures and photophysical properties, pyrene-based asymmetric liquid crystal (LC) dendrons (abbreviated as PD) were newly synthesized by covalently attaching a pyrene moiety (P) at a biphenyl-based LC dendritic group (D). The phase transition behavior of PD has been systematically studied with a combined technique of thermal analysis, microscopy, spectroscopy, and scattering analysis. PD formed two different crystalline structures depending on the cooling rate: a stable crystalline phase (Ks , slow cooling) and a metastable crystalline phase (Kms , quenching). The kinetically controlled molecular packing structures of PD depend on the competition and cooperation of intermolecular physical interactions with nanophase separation. Upon slow cooling, the PD dimer formed by intermoelcular H-bonding constructed a layered hierarchical structure with the help of nanophase separation. Owing to the strong π-π stacking (J-aggregation) with weak H-bondings, the PD dimer in the layer was slightly tilted to give a monoclinic layered structure with a periodic layer d-spacing of 6.6â nm. In contrast, the metastable Kms phase formed by the quenching process showed a significant tilt of the PD dimer in the layer (d-spacing=4.4â nm) due to the weak π-π stacking (H-aggregation) and the strong H-bondings.
RESUMEN
Tetrathiafulvalene (TTF)-based reactive mesogens (TTF-E and TTF-T) are synthesized, self-assembled, uniaxially oriented, and polymerized for the development of encryptable electrochromic smart windows. Electrochemical and spectroscopic experiments prove that the self-assembled TTF mixture (TTFM, TTF-E:TTF-T = 1:1) can reversibly switch the absorption wavelength of the TTF chromophore according to the redox reactions. Based on the identification of the phase transition and crystallographic structure, uniaxially oriented hierarchical nanostructures are easily constructed on the macroscopic area by simple coating and a self-assembly process. Subsequent polymerization of hierarchical nanostructures of TTFM significantly enhances thermal and mechanical stabilities and makes it possible for them to be fabricated as an electrochromic device. The angularly dependent correlation between the anisotropy of mesogens and the linearly polarized light allow us to demonstrate TTFM as smart windows capable of various optical security applications, including privacy protection and information encryption.
RESUMEN
Light manipulation strategies of nature have fascinated humans for centuries. In particular, structural colors are of considerable interest due to their ability to control the interaction between light and matter. Here, wrinkled photonic crystal papers (PCPs) are fabricated to demonstrate the consistent reflection of colors regardless of viewing angles. The nanoscale molecular self-assembly of a cholesteric liquid crystal (CLC) with a microscale corrugated surface is combined. Fully polymerizable CLC paints are uniaxially coated onto a wrinkled interpenetrating polymer network (IPN) substrate. Photopolymerization of the helicoidal nanostructures results in a flexible and free-standing PCP. The facile method of fabricating the wrinkled PCPs provides a scalable route for the development of novel chirophotonic materials with precisely controlled helical pitch and curvature dimensions. The reflection notch position of the flat PCP shifts to a lower wavelength when the viewing angle increased, while the selective reflection wavelength of wrinkled PCP is remained consistent regardless of viewing angles. The optical reflection of the 1D stripe-wrinkled PCP is dependent on the wrinkle direction. PCPs with different corrugated directions can be patterned to reduce the angular-dependent optical reflection of wrinkles. Furthermore, 2D wavy-wrinkled PCP is successfully developed that exhibit directionally independent reflection of color.
RESUMEN
For the development of optically encryptable smart glass that can control the molecular alignment of liquid crystals (LCs), an azobenzene-based reactive molecule (ARM) capable of trans-cis photoisomerization is newly designed and synthesized. Photo-triggered LC-commandable smart glasses are successfully constructed by the surface functionalization technique using 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTMS) coupling agent and an ARM. The surface functionalization with the ARM is verified by spectroscopic analysis and various observations including changes in the wettability and surface morphology. Using the ARM-treated substrate, the LC command cell which can effectively switch the molecular orientation of nematic LC (E7) by the irradiation of UV and visible light is demonstrated. The results of optical investigation demonstrate the directional correlation between light and photoisomerization, revealing the tilt mechanism of azobenzene units. The capability to control the molecular orientation of LCs remotely and selectively allows the development of remote-controllable and encryptable smart glasses.
RESUMEN
Utilizing a newly programmed and synthesized heat storage mesogen (HSM) and reactive mesogen (RM), advanced heat managing polymer alloys that exhibit high thermal conductivity, high latent heat, and phase transition at high temperatures were developed for use as smart thermal energy harvesting and reutilization materials. The RM in the heat-managing RM-HSM polymer alloy was polymerized to form a robust polymeric network with high thermal conductivity. The phase-separated HSM domains between RM polymeric networks absorbed and released a lot of thermal energy in response to changes in the surrounding temperature. For the fabrication of smart heat-managing RM-HSM polymer alloys, the composition and polymerization temperature were optimized based on the constructed phase diagram and thermal energy managing properties of the RM-HSM mixture. From morphological investigation and thermal analysis, it was realized that the heat storage capacity of polymer alloys depends on the size of the phase-separated HSM domain. The structure-morphology-property relationship of the heat managing polymer alloys was built based on the combined techniques of thermal, scattering, and morphological analysis. The newly developed mesogen-based polymer alloys can be used as smart thermal energy-harvesting and reutilization materials.
RESUMEN
For flexible displays, there is a desperate need for a broadband coatable polarizer that can absorb light in a specific direction. Conventional polarizers fabricated by the polymer stretching process are too thick (50-200 µm) to be used as polarizers that can be applied to antireflective films in flexible displays. For the development of the broadband coatable thin film polarizer, diacetylene (DA) amphiphiles containing I- or I3- are newly designed and synthesized, and the content of DA amphiphiles in the 4,6-decadiyne solvent is optimized to form a lyotropic liquid crystal (LLC) phase. Topochemical polymerization of uniaxially oriented iodine-based DA not only stabilizes the film but also broadens the polarization light region from 350 to 700 nm. The transfer and amplification of iodine and DA functions in uniaxially oriented thin films enable the fabrication of broadband coatable thin film polarizers.
RESUMEN
The development of smart inks that change color and transparency in response to external stimuli is very important for various fields, from modern art to safety and anticounterfeiting technology. A uniaxially oriented diacetylene thin film on a macroscopic area is obtained by coating, self-assembling and topochemical photopolymerizing of imidazolium-functionalized diacetylenes (M-DA and T-DA) and 4,6-decadiyne ink (70 wt%:20 wt%:10 wt%) exhibiting a lyotropic smectic A liquid-crystalline phase at room temperature. The color and transparency of letters and symbols written with the DA-based secret inks change reversibly from blue to red as well as from colorless transparent to black opaque depending on the temperature and polarization axis. A secret code written with thermoresponsive and polarization-dependent secret inks consisting of imidazolium-functionalized diacetylenes is successfully deciphered by wearing polaroid glasses and holding a burning torch.
RESUMEN
To develop light-triggered wringing gels, an asymmetric macrogelator (1AZ3BP) was newly synthesized by the chemically bridging a photoisomerizable azobenzene (1AZ) molecular machine and a biphenyl-based (3BP) dendron with a 1,4-phenylenediformamide connector. 1AZ3BP was self-assembled into a layered superstructure in the bulk state, but 1AZ3BP formed a three-dimensional (3D) network organogel in solution. Upon irradiating UV light onto the 3D network organogel, the solvent of the organogel was squeezed and the 3D network was converted to the layered morphology. It was realized that the metastable 3D network organogels were fabricated mainly due to the nanophase separation in solution. UV isomerization of 1AZ3BP provided sufficient molecular mobility to form strong hydrogen bonds for the construction of the stable layered superstructure. The light-triggered wringing gels can be smartly applied in remote-controlled generators, liquid storages, and sensors.
RESUMEN
For the development of anisotropic thermal interface materials (TIMs), a rod-shaped reactive monomer PNP-6MA is newly designed and successfully synthesized. PNP-6MA reveals a smectic A (SmA) mesophase between crystalline (K) and isotropic (I) phases. PNP-6MA can be oriented under a magnetic field ( B = 2 T), and its macroscopic orientation can be robustly stabilized by in situ polymerization. Even without macroscopic orientations, the fabricated thermal conducting liquid crystal (TCLC) films show the outstanding thermal conductivity of 1.21 W/m K, which is higher than conventional organic materials. The thermal conductivity of uniaxially and macroscopically oriented TCLC films can be 2.5 W/m K along the long axis of mesogenic core. The newly developed TCLC film can be used as a TIM between a high-power light-emitting diode and a heat sink.
RESUMEN
To develop an advanced heat transfer composite, a deeper understanding of the interfacial correlation between matrix and filler is of paramount importance. To verify the effect of interfacial correlations on the thermal conductivity, the conductive fillers such as expanded graphite (EG) and boron nitride (BN) are introduced in the discotic liquid crystal (DLC)-based polymeric matrix. The DLC matrix exhibits better interfacial affinity with EG compared to BN because of the strong π-π interactions between EG and DLC. Thanks to its excellent interfacial affinity, the EG-DLC composites show a synergistic increment in thermal conducting performance.
RESUMEN
The synthesized itaconic acid-based dendritic amphiphile (Ita3C12) monomers and the methacryl polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (MAPOSS) cross-linkers were directly introduced for the construction of automatic vertical alignment (auto-VA) layers in the host nematic liquid crystal (NLC) medium. The auto-VA layer can be stabilized by irradiating UV light. For the automatic fabrication of a polymer-stabilized multidomain VA (PS auto-MDVA) layer with a pretilt angle, Ita3C12 and MAPOSS were photopolymerized under the electric field by irradiating UV light on the multidomain electrode cell. Mainly because of the pretilted NLC at zero voltage, the electro-optic properties of the PS auto-MDVA cell were dramatically improved. From the morphological observations combined with surface chemical analyses, it was found that various sizes of protrusions on the solid substrates were automatically constructed by the two-step mechanisms. We demonstrated the PS auto-MDVA cell with the enhancement of electro-optic properties as a single-step process and investigated how the protrusions were automatically developed during the polymer stabilization.
RESUMEN
For the development of advanced heat transfer organic materials (HTOMs) with excellent thermal conductivities, triphenylene-based reactive discogens, 2,3,6,7,10,11-hexakis(but-3-enyloxy)triphenylene (HABET) and 4,4',4â³,4â´,4'''',4'''''-(triphenylene-2,3,6,7,10,11-hexaylhexakis(oxy))hexakis(butane-1-thiol) (THBT), were synthesized as discotic liquid crystal (DLC) monomers and cross-linkers, respectively. A temperature-composition phase diagram of HABET-THBT mixtures was first established based on their thermal and microscopic analyses. From the experimental results, it was realized that the thermal conductivity of DLC HTOM was strongly affected by the molecular organizations on a macroscopic length scale. Macroscopic orientation of self-assembled columns in DLC HTOMs was effectively achieved under the rotating magnetic fields and successfully stabilized by the photopolymerization. The DLC HTOM polymer-stabilized at the LC phase exhibited the remarkable thermal conductivity above 1 W/mK. When the DLC HTOM was macroscopically oriented, the thermal conductivity was estimated to be 3 W/mK along the in-plane direction of DLC molecule. The outstanding thermal conductivity of DLC HTOM should be originated not only from the high content of two-dimensional aromatic discogens but also from the macroscopically oriented and self-assembled DLC. The newly developed DLC HTOM with an outstanding thermal conductivity as well as with an excellent mechanical sustainability can be applied as directional heat dissipating materials in electronic and display devices.
RESUMEN
A palladium(ii)-based metallomesogen with azobenzene was synthesized for the fabrication of an optically and electrically tunable polarized light modulator. Owing to the extended molecular geometry constructed by organometallic chemistry, the photo-responsive metallomesogen showed an excellent orientation in liquid crystal media.
RESUMEN
A multifunctional optical thin film (MOTF) is fabricated by coating the newly synthesized perylene-based reactive mesogen (PBRM) and stabilized by the subsequent photopolymerization. Based on the spectroscopic results combined with morphological observations, it is found that nematic liquid crystal (NLC) is aligned parallel to the molecular long axis of PBRM not only due to the long-range physical anchoring effect but also due to the short-range molecular physical interactions between alignment layer and NLC molecules. From the electro-optical properties of LC test cells fabricated with the PBRM MOTF, it is clearly demonstrated that the PBRM MOTF can work as the planar LC alignment layer as well as the in-cell coatable polarizer. The coatable PBRM MOTF from lyotropic chromonic reactive mesogens can pave a new way for the flexible optoelectronic devices.
RESUMEN
A perylene-based reactive mesogen (DAPDI) forming a lyotropic chromonic liquid crystal (LCLC) phase was newly designed and synthesized for the fabrication of macroscopically oriented and patterned thin film polarizer (TFP) on the flexible polymer substrates. The anisotropic optical property and molecular self-assembly of DAPDI were investigated by the combination of microscopic, scattering and spectroscopic techniques. The main driving forces of molecular self-assembly were the face-to-face π-π intermolecular interaction among aromatic cores and the nanophase separation between hydrophilic ionic groups and hydrophobic aromatic cores. Degree of polarization for the macroscopically oriented and photopolymerized DAPDI TFP was estimated to be 99.81% at the λmax = 491 nm. After mechanically shearing the DAPDI LCLC aqueous solution on the flexible polymer substrates, we successfully fabricated the patterned DAPDI TFP by etching the unpolymerized regions selectively blocked by a photomask during the photopolymerization process. Chemical and mechanical stabilities were confirmed by the solvent and pencil hardness tests, and its surface morphology was further investigated by optical microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and three-dimensional surface nanoprofiler. The flexible and patterned DAPDI TFP with robust chemical and mechanical stabilities can be a stepping stone for the advanced flexible optoelectronic devices.
RESUMEN
Photoresponsive carbohydrate-based giant surfactants (abbreviated as CELAnD-OH) were specifically designed and synthesized for the automatic vertical alignment (VA) layer of nematic (N) liquid crystal (LC), which can be applied for the fabrication of remote-controllable optical devices. Without the conventional polymer-based LC alignment process, a perfect VA layer was automatically constructed by directly adding the 0.1 wt % CELA1D-OH in the N-LC media. The programmed CELA1D-OH giant surfactants in the N-LC media gradually diffused onto the substrates of LC cell and self-assembled to the expanded monolayer structure, which can provide enough empty spaces for N-LC molecules to crawl into the empty zones for the construction of VA layer. On the other hand, the CELA3D-OH giant surfactants forming the condensed monolayer structure on the substrates exhibited a planar alignment (PA) rather than a VA. Upon tuning the wavelength of light, the N-LC alignments were reversibly switched between VA and PA in the remote-controllable LC optical devices. Based on the experimental results, it was realized that understanding the interactions between N-LC molecules and amphiphilic giant surfactants is critical to design the suitable materials for the automatic LC alignment.