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1.
Nat Chem ; 2024 Apr 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38671301

RESUMEN

Artificial molecular motors and machines constitute a critical element in the transition from individual molecular motion to the creation of collective dynamic molecular systems and responsive materials. The design of artificial light-driven molecular motors operating with high efficiency and selectivity constitutes an ongoing fundamental challenge. Here we present a highly versatile synthetic approach based on Rieche formylation that boosts the quantum yield of the forward photoisomerization reaction while reaching near-perfect selectivity in the steps involved in the unidirectional rotary cycle and drastically reducing competing photoreactions. This motor is readily accessible in its enantiopure form and operates with nearly quantitative photoconversions. It can easily be functionalized further and outperforms its direct predecessor as a reconfigurable chiral dopant in cholesteric liquid crystal materials.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(18): e202401291, 2024 Apr 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38445723

RESUMEN

The transmission of chiral information between the molecular, meso and microscopic scales is a facet of biology that remains challenging to understand mechanistically and to mimic with artificial systems. Here we demonstrate that the dynamic change in the expression of the chirality of a rotaxane can be transduced into a change in pitch of a soft matter system. Shuttling the position of the macrocycle from far-away-from to close-to a point-chiral center on the rotaxane axle changes the expression of the chiral information that is transmitted across length scales; from nanometer scale constitutional chirality that affects the conformation of the macrocycle, to the centimeter scale chirality of the liquid crystal phase, significantly changing the pitch length of the chiral nematic structure.

3.
Chem ; 8(8): 2290-2300, 2022 Aug 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36003886

RESUMEN

Microscopic motility is a property that emerges from systems of interacting molecules. Unraveling the mechanisms underlying such motion requires coupling the chemistry of molecules with physical processes that operate at larger length scales. Here, we show that photoactive micelles composed of molecular switches gate the autonomous motion of oil droplets in water. These micelles switch from large trans-micelles to smaller cis-micelles in response to light, and only the trans-micelles are effective fuel for the motion. Ultimately, it is this light that controls the movement of the droplets via the photochemistry of the molecules composing the micelles used as fuel. Notably, the droplets evolve positive photokinetic movement, and in patchy light environments, they preferentially move toward peripheral areas as a result of the difference in illumination conditions at the periphery. Our findings demonstrate that engineering the interplay between molecular photo-chemistry and microscopic motility allows designing motile systems rationally.

4.
Nat Rev Chem ; 6(6): 377-388, 2022 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37117430

RESUMEN

Motility is the capacity for living organisms to move autonomously and with purpose, and is essential to life. The transition from abiotic chemistry into motile cellular compartments has yet to be understood, but motile behaviour likely followed chemical evolution because primeval cell survival depended on scouting for resources effectively. Minimalistic motile systems provide an experimental framework to delineate the emergence mechanisms of such an evolutionary asset. In this Review, we discuss frontier developments in controlling the movement of droplets in lipid systems, in particular, chemotactic behaviours driven by fluctuations in interfacial tension, because of its simple mechanism and prebiotic relevance. Although most efforts have focused on designing oil droplet motility in lipid-rich aqueous solutions, we highlight that water droplets can also move in lipid-enriched oils. First, we describe how droplets evolve chemotactic motility in lipid systems. Next, we review how these oil droplets can adapt their movement to illumination conditions. Finally, we discuss examples where chemical reactivity brings complexity to motility. This work contributes to systems chemistry, where chemical reactions combined with physicochemical phenomena can yield new functions, such that a limited set of molecules can promote complex movement at larger functional scales by following the rules of molecular chemistry.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Química , Aceites , Aceites/química , Tensión Superficial
5.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 2959, 2021 05 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34011926

RESUMEN

Self-reproducing molecules abound in nature where they support growth and motion of living systems. In artificial settings, chemical reactions can also show complex kinetics of reproduction, however integrating self-reproducing molecules into larger chemical systems remains a challenge towards achieving higher order functionality. Here, we show that self-reproducing lipids can initiate, sustain and accelerate the movement of octanol droplets in water. Reciprocally, the chemotactic movement of the octanol droplets increases the rate of lipid reproduction substantially. Reciprocal coupling between bond-forming chemistry and droplet motility is thus established as an effect of the interplay between molecular-scale events (the self-reproduction of lipid molecules) and microscopic events (the chemotactic movement of the droplets). This coupling between molecular chemistry and microscopic motility offers alternative means of performing work and catalysis in micro-heterogeneous environments.

6.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(3): 4777-4784, 2021 Jan 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33428396

RESUMEN

Nano- and micro-actuating systems are promising for application in microfluidics, haptics, tunable optics, and soft robotics. Surfaces capable to change their topography at the nano- and microscale on demand would allow control over wettability, friction, and surface-driven particle motility. Here, we show that light-responsive cholesteric liquid crystal (LC) networks undergo a waving motion of their surface topography upon irradiation with light. These dynamic surfaces are fabricated with a maskless one-step procedure, relying on the liquid crystal alignment in periodic structures upon application of a weak electric field. The geometrical features of the surfaces are controlled by tuning the pitch of the liquid crystal. Pitch control by confinement allows engineering one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) structures that wave upon light exposure. This work demonstrates the potential that self-organizing systems might have for engineering dynamic materials, and harnessing the functionality of molecules to form dynamic surfaces, with nanoscale precision over their waving motion.

7.
Adv Mater ; 32(47): e2004420, 2020 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33073425

RESUMEN

Unravelling the rules of molecular motion is a contemporary challenge that promises to support the development of responsive materials and is likely to enhance the understanding of functional motion. Advances in integrating light-driven molecular motors in soft matter have led to the design and realization of chiral nematic (cholesteric) liquid crystals that can respond to light with modification of their helical pitch, and also with helix inversion. Under illumination, these chiral liquid crystals convert from one helical geometry to another. Here, a series of light-driven molecular motors that feature a rich configurational landscape is presented, specifically which involves three stable chiral states. The succession of chiral structures involved in the motor cycle is transmitted at higher structural levels, as the cholesteric liquid crystals that are formed can interconvert between helices of opposite handedness, reversibly. In these materials, the dynamic features of the motors are thus expressed at the near-macroscopic, functional level, into addressable colors that can be used in advanced materials for tunable optics and photonics.

8.
Nat Chem ; 12(10): 939-944, 2020 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32747756

RESUMEN

Transferring structural information from the nanoscale to the macroscale is a promising strategy for developing adaptive and dynamic materials. Here we demonstrate that the knotting and unknotting of a molecular strand can be used to control, and even invert, the handedness of a helical organization within a liquid crystal. An oligodentate tris(2,6-pyridinedicarboxamide) strand with six point-chiral centres folds into an overhand knot of single handedness upon coordination to lanthanide ions, both in isotropic solutions and in liquid crystals. In achiral liquid crystals, dopant knotted and unknotted strands induce supramolecular helical organizations of opposite handedness, with dynamic switching achievable through in situ knotting and unknotting events. Tying the molecular knot transmits information regarding asymmetry across length scales, from Euclidean point chirality (constitutional chirality) via molecular entanglement (conformation) to liquid-crystal (centimetre-scale) chirality. The magnitude of the effect induced by the tying of the molecular knots is similar to that famously used to rotate a glass rod on the surface of a liquid crystal by synthetic molecular motors.

9.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 5238, 2019 11 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31748502

RESUMEN

The physico-chemical processes supporting life's purposeful movement remain essentially unknown. Self-propelling chiral droplets offer a minimalistic model of swimming cells and, in surfactant-rich water, droplets of chiral nematic liquid crystals follow the threads of a screw. We demonstrate that the geometry of their trajectory is determined by both the number of turns in, and the handedness of, their spiral organization. Using molecular motors as photo-invertible chiral dopants allows converting between right-handed and left-handed trajectories dynamically, and droplets subjected to such an inversion reorient in a direction that is also encoded by the number of spiral turns. This motile behavior stems from dynamic transmission of chirality, from the artificial molecular motors to the liquid crystal in confinement and eventually to the helical trajectory, in analogy with the chirality-operated motion and reorientation of swimming cells and unicellular organisms.


Asunto(s)
Cristales Líquidos , Movimiento , Orientación Espacial , Estereoisomerismo , Tensoactivos , Agua
10.
Macromol Rapid Commun ; 40(23): e1900412, 2019 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31631447

RESUMEN

Photosensitive liquid crystalline (LC) block copolymers are a universal platform for designing functional materials for optics and photonics. Here, azobenzene LC ABA triblock copolymer containing mesogenic groups in each block is studied as a medium for the recording of polarization holographic gratings. The fast recording of polarization gratings is successfully performed with two orthogonally circularly polarized light beams of a 532-nm laser. It is shown that annealing of the recorded polarization grating increases diffraction efficiency considerably, by a factor of 70, and provokes simultaneous erasing of the surface relief grating if it has been recorded. Holographic behavior of the triblock copolymer is compared with that of an azobenzene homopolymer and a random copolymer, which has the same monomer ratio as the triblock copolymer. The obtained results are expected to allow designing new materials for the polarization of optical elements and holographic data storage.


Asunto(s)
Compuestos Azo/química , Cristales Líquidos/química , Polímeros/síntesis química , Estructura Molecular , Tamaño de la Partícula , Polímeros/química , Propiedades de Superficie
11.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 4819, 2019 10 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31645565

RESUMEN

The motion of artificial molecular machines has been amplified into the shape transformation of polymer materials that have been compared to muscles, where mechanically active molecules work together to produce a contraction. In spite of this progress, harnessing cooperative molecular motion remains a challenge in this field. Here, we show how the light-induced action of artificial molecular switches modifies not only the shape but also, simultaneously, the stiffness of soft materials. The heterogeneous design of these materials features inclusions of free liquid crystal in a liquid crystal polymer network. When the magnitude of the intrinsic interfacial tension is modified by the action of the switches, photo-stiffening is observed, in analogy with the mechanical response of activated muscle fibers, and in contrast to melting mechanisms reported so far. Mechanoadaptive materials that are capable of active tuning of rigidity will likely contribute to a bottom-up approach towards human-friendly and soft robotics.


Asunto(s)
Órganos Artificiales , Dureza/efectos de la radiación , Cristales Líquidos/química , Fenómenos Mecánicos , Fibras Musculares Esqueléticas , Músculo Esquelético , Polímeros/química , Rayos Ultravioleta , Cristales Líquidos/efectos de la radiación , Contracción Muscular , Polímeros/efectos de la radiación , Estrés Mecánico
12.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(11): 10895-10904, 2019 Mar 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30777420

RESUMEN

The future of adaptive materials will rely on transduction of molecular motion across increasing length scales, up to the macroscopic and functional level. In this context, liquid crystals have emerged as a promising amplification medium, in view of their long-range order and high sensitivity to external stimuli, and in particular, chiral liquid crystals have demonstrated widely tunable optical properties and invertible handedness. Here, we demonstrate that by applying weak electric fields, regular, periodic and light-tunable patterns can be formed spontaneously in cholesteric liquid crystals. These patterns can be used as light-tunable diffraction gratings for which the period, the diffraction efficiency, and the in-plane orientation of grating vector can be controlled precisely, reversibly, and independently. Such a photoregulation allows generating a variety of one- and two-dimensional complex diffractive patterns in a single material. Our data are also supported by modeling and theoretical calculations. Overall, the fine tunability of cholesteric materials doped with artificial molecular switches makes them attractive for optics and photonics.

13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(3): 1196-1200, 2019 01 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30624915

RESUMEN

Interfacing molecular photoswitches with liquid crystal polymers enables the amplification of their nanoscale motion into macroscopic shape transformations. Typically, the mechanism responsible for actuation involves light-induced molecular disorder. Here, we demonstrate that bistable hydrazones can drive (chiral) shape transformations in liquid crystal polymer networks, with photogenerated polymer shapes displaying a long-term stability that mirrors that of the switches. The mechanism involves a photoinduced buildup of tension in the polymer, with a negligible influence on the liquid crystalline order. Hydrazone-doped liquid crystal systems thus diversify the toolbox available to the field of light-adaptive molecular actuators and hold promise in terms of soft robotics.

14.
Soft Matter ; 13(44): 8070-8075, 2017 Nov 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29053166

RESUMEN

Developing shape-shifting materials requires combining the flexibility needed by shape-shifting properties, with the toughness that is demanded to maintain their mechanical performance. Typically, in liquid crystal networks, the amplitude of the shape transformation can be hindered by large cross-linking densities. Here, we argue that a promising strategy to address this limitation consists in integrating liquid crystal networks into an anisotropic and porous material that acts as an orienting scaffold. This strategy shows similarities with the principles of stimuli-responsive deformation in plants, where inflexible elements with specific orientations are integrated into a stimuli-responsive matrix. By aligning liquid crystals in a porous polypropylene orienting scaffold, we demonstrate liquid crystal networks that respond to humidity with a shape change, yet they display high elastic modulus and toughness. Various chiral shapes can be generated in single and double layers of these films, and the complexity of their actuation modes is enhanced, including twisting, curling or winding. We anticipate that these hybrid composites and the strategy they embody can find application to other stimuli-responsive anisotropic soft materials.

16.
Adv Mater ; 28(46): 10217-10223, 2016 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27714930

RESUMEN

Volume diffraction gratings (VDGs) are inscribed selectively by diffusive introduction of benzophenone and subsequent UV-holographic structuring into an electroactive dielectric elastomer actuator (DEA), to afford a continuous voltage-controlled grating shift of 17%. The internal stress coupling of DEA and optical domain allows for a new generation of true monolithic tunable elastomer optics with voltage controlled properties.

17.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 8(40): 27227-27235, 2016 Oct 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27633069

RESUMEN

The past two decades witnessed tremendous progress in the field of creation of different types of responsive materials. Cholesteric polymer networks present a very promising class of smart materials due to the combination of the unique optical properties of cholesteric mesophase and high mechanical properties of polymer networks. In the present work we demonstrate the possibility of fast and reversible photocontrol of the optical properties of cholesteric polymer networks. Several cholesteric photopolymerizable mixtures are prepared, and porous cholesteric network films with different helix pitches are produced by polymerization of these mixtures. An effective and simple method of the introduction of photochromic azobenzene-containing nematic mixture capable of isothermal photoinducing the nematic-isotropic phase transition into the porous polymer matrix is developed. It is found that cross-linking density and degree of polymer network filling with a photochromic nematic mixture strongly influence the photo-optical behavior of the obtained composite films. In particular, the densely cross-linked films are characterized by a decrease in selective light reflection bandwidth, whereas weakly cross-linked systems display two processes: the shift of selective light reflection peak and decrease of its width. It is noteworthy that the obtained cholesteric materials are shown to be very promising for the variety applications in optoelectronics and photonics.

18.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 7(48): 26595-602, 2015 Dec 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26565667

RESUMEN

We report on a new low-cost and easily fabricated type of liquid crystalline polymer composites demonstrating low threshold random lasing, which can be used as a cheap and simple mirror-less laser source. The composite is based on mass-producible commercially available porous polypropylene (Celgard 2500) infiltrated with low-molar-mass liquid crystal material doped with Rhodamine 800 laser dye. Excitation with red nanosecond laser (630 nm) induces random lasing with the emission peak in NIR spectral range (804 nm) with noticeable degree of linear polarization. The possibility to control the lasing threshold and polarization of the output light with UV radiation through photoswitching of liquid crystal phase from nematic to isotropic is demonstrated. The photocontrollable phase switching is achieved by reversible E/Z isomerization of the azobenzene dopant introduced to the nematic host matrix. It is revealed that the isotropic state of liquid crystal provides more efficient random lasing with lower threshold due to significant scattering of the ordinary wave.

19.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 7(4): 2554-60, 2015 Feb 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25541812

RESUMEN

A cholesteric mixture based on the nematic liquid crystalline side-chain polymer doped with a chiral-photochromic compound was prepared and used as an active medium for creation of stable polarization selective gratings by phototunable modulation of the helix pitch. Such modulation was fabricated in the polymer mixture by a nonpolarized UV-irradiation with spatially modulated intensity that causes E-Z isomerization of a chiral-photochromic dopant, decreasing its helical twisting power. It was shown that the gratings recorded by UV-exposure through a mask are strongly selective to the handedness of circular polarized light. The studied polymer film forms a right-handed helical structure and, correspondingly, the diffraction of only the right-circularly polarized light was found in the transmittance mode. The maximum diffraction efficiencies were found for the wavelength values between the maxima of selective light reflection. The films obtained open very interesting possibilities for further development of materials with stable gratings operating in the entire visible spectral range. Both the position and the width of the spectral range of an efficient diffraction can be easily controlled by the UV exposure and concentration of the dopant. The materials obtained and methods developed can be used for creation of specific diffraction elements for optics and photonics.

20.
Macromol Rapid Commun ; 33(21): 1875-81, 2012 Nov 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22941917

RESUMEN

For the first time, the films based on polymer-stabilized cholesteric composites containing crown ether fragments with the optical properties sensitive to the complexation with potassium and barium ions were obtained. The complexation with these ions leads to blue spectral shift of the selective light reflection of planar cholesteric texture of composite films. Peculiarities of spectral changes and kinetics of selective light reflection shift were studied. The proposed approach can be used for the creation of the effective and selective sensor materials for different ions or groups of ions.


Asunto(s)
Técnicas Biosensibles/instrumentación , Colesterol/química , Éteres Corona/química , Polímeros/química , Bario/química , Potasio/química
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