RESUMO
Polydopamine (PDA) is a synthetic model for melanin and has a wide range of opto-electronic properties that underpin its utility in applied and biological settings, from broadband light absorbance to possessing stable free radical species. Here, we show that PDA free radicals are photo-responsive under visible light irradiation, enabling PDA to serve as a photo-redox catalyst. Steady-state and transient electron spin resonance spectroscopy reveals a reversible amplification in semiquinone radical population within PDA under visible light. This photo-response modifies the redox potential of PDA and supports sensitisation of exogenous species via photoinduced electron transfer (PET). We demonstrate the utility of this discovery by employing PDA nanoparticles to photosensitise a common diaryliodonium photoinitiator and initiate free-radical polymerisation (FRP) of vinylic monomers. In situ 1 H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy reveals an interplay between PDA-driven photosensitising and radical quenching during FRP under blue, green, and red light. This work provides crucial insights into the photoactive free radical properties of melanin-like materials and reveals a promising new application for polydopamine as a photosensitiser.
RESUMO
In their Comment (DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c02965) on two related publications by our groups (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2021, 143, 20884-20890; DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c09455) and another (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2022, 144, 1380-1388; DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c11754), Huang and Granick discuss the diffusion NMR measurements of molecules during a copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) "click" reaction. Here we respond to these comments and maintain that no diffusion enhancement was observed for any species during the reaction. We show that the relaxation agent does not interfere with the CuAAC reaction kinetics nor the diffusion of the molecules involved. Similarly, the gradient pulse length and diffusion time do not affect the diffusion coefficients. Peak overlap was completely removed in our study with the use of hydrazine as the reducing agent. The steady-state assumption does not hold for these diffusion measurements that take several minutes, which is the reason monotonic gradient orders are not suitable. Finally, we discuss the other reactions where similar changes in diffusion have been claimed. Our conclusions are fully supported by the results represented in our original JACS Article and the corresponding Supporting Information.
Assuntos
Alcinos , Azidas , Alcinos/química , Azidas/química , Catálise , Cobre/química , Reação de CicloadiçãoRESUMO
Modifying surfaces using free radical polymerization (FRP) offers a means to incorporate the diverse physicochemical properties of vinyl polymers onto new materials. Here, we harness the universal surface attachment of polydopamine (PDA) to "prime" a range of different surfaces for free radical polymer attachment, including glass, cotton, paper, sponge, and stainless steel. We show that the intrinsic free radical species present in PDA can serve as an anchor point for subsequent attachment of propagating vinyl polymer macroradicals through radical-radical coupling. Leveraging a straightforward, twofold soak-wash protocol, FRP over the PDA-functionalized surfaces results in covalent polymer attachment on both porous and nonporous substrates, imparting new properties to the functionalized materials, including enhanced hydrophobicity, fluorescence, or temperature responsiveness. Our strategy is then extended to covalently incorporate PDA nanoparticles into organo-/hydrogels via radical cross-linking, yielding tunable PDA-polymer composite networks. The propensity of PDA free radicals to quench FRP is studied using in situ 1H nuclear magnetic resonance and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, revealing a surface area-dependent macroradical scavenging mechanism that underpins PDA-polymer conjugation. By combining the arbitrary surface attachment of PDA with the broad physicochemical properties of vinyl polymers, our strategy provides a straightforward route for imparting unlimited new functionality to practically any surface.
Assuntos
Indóis , Polímeros , Radicais Livres , Indóis/química , Polimerização , Polímeros/químicaRESUMO
A photoswitchable ligand and palladium(II) ions form a dynamic mixture of self-assembled metallosupramolecular structures. The photoswitching ligand is an ortho-fluoroazobenzene with appended pyridyl groups. Combining the E-isomer with palladium(II) salts affords a double-walled triangle with composition [Pd3 L6 ]6+ and a distorted tetrahedron [Pd4 L8 ]8+ (1 : 2 ratio at 298â K). Irradiation with 410â nm light generates a photostationary state with approximately 80 % of the E-isomer of the ligand and results in the selective disassembly of the tetrahedron, the more thermodynamically stable structure, and the formation of the triangle, the more kinetically inert product. The triangle is then slowly transformed back into the tetrahedron over 2â days at 333â K. The Z-isomer of the ligand does not form any well-defined structures and has a thermal half-life of 25â days at 298â K. This approach shows how a thermodynamically preferred self-assembled structure can be reversibly pumped to a kinetic trap by small perturbations of the isomer distribution using non-destructive visible light.
RESUMO
The reported changes in self-diffusion of small molecules during reactions have been attributed to "boosted mobility". We demonstrate the critical role of changing concentrations of paramagnetic ions on nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signal intensities, which led to erroneous measurements of diffusion coefficients. We present simple methods to overcome this problem. The use of shuffled gradient amplitudes allows accurate diffusion NMR measurements, even with time-dependent relaxation rates caused by changing concentrations of paramagnetic ions. The addition of a paramagnetic relaxation agent allows accurate determination of both diffusion coefficients and reaction kinetics during a single experiment. We analyze a copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition "click" reaction, for which boosted mobility has been claimed. With our methods, we accurately measure the diffusive behavior of the solvent, starting materials, and product and find no global increase in diffusion coefficients during the reaction. We overcome NMR signal overlap using an alternative reducing agent to improve the accuracy of the diffusion measurements. The alkyne reactant diffuses slower as the reaction proceeds due to binding to the copper catalyst during the catalytic cycle. The formation of this intermediate was confirmed by complementary NMR techniques and density functional theory calculations. Our work calls into question recent claims that molecules actively propel or swim during reactions and establishes that time-resolved diffusion NMR measurements can provide valuable insight into reaction mechanisms.
RESUMO
Two photoswitchable arylazopyrozoles form hydrogels at a concentration of 1.2 % (w/v). With a molecular weight of 258.28â g mol-1 , these are the lowest known molecular weight hydrogelators that respond reversibly to light. Photoswitching of the E- to the Z-form by exposure to 365â nm light results in a macroscopic gelâsol transition; nearly an order of magnitude reduction in the measured elastic and loss moduli. In the case of the meta-arylazopyrozole, cryogenic transmission electron microscopy suggests that the 29±7â nm wide sheets in the E-gel state narrow to 13±2â nm upon photoswitching to the predominantly Z-solution state. Photoswitching for meta-arylazopyrozole is reversible through cycles of 365â nm and 520â nm excitation with little fatigue. The release of a rhodamineâ B dye encapsulated in gels formed by the arylazopyrozoles is accelerated more than 20-fold upon photoswitching with 365â nm light, demonstrating these materials are suitable for light-controlled cargo release.
RESUMO
Online, high-throughput molecular weight analysis of polymerizations is rare, with most studies relying on tedious sampling techniques and batchwise postanalysis. The ability to track both monomer conversion and molecular weight evolution in real time could underpin precision polymer development and facilitate study of rapid polymerization reactions. Here, we use a single time-resolved diffusion nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiment to simultaneously study the kinetics and molecular weight evolution during a photopolymerization, with in situ irradiation inside the NMR instrument. As a model system, we used a photoinduced electron transfer reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (PET-RAFT) polymerization. The data allow diffusion coefficients and intensities to be calculated every 14 s from which the polymer size and monomer conversion can be extracted. Key to this approach is (1) the use of shuffled gradient amplitudes in the diffusion NMR experiment to access reactions of any rate, (2) the addition of a relaxation agent to increase achievable time resolution and, (3) a sliding correction that accounts for viscosity changes during polymerization. Diffusion NMR offers a uniquely simple, translatable handle for online monitoring of polymerization reactions.
Assuntos
Polímeros , Cinética , Peso Molecular , Polimerização , Polímeros/química , ViscosidadeRESUMO
A study reported in The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters (Wang et al., 2021, 12, 2370) of "boosted mobility" measured by diffusion NMR experiments contains significant errors in data analysis and interpretation. We carefully reanalyzed the same data and find no evidence of boosted mobility, and we identify several sources of error.
Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Difusão , Espectroscopia de Ressonância MagnéticaRESUMO
The apparent "boosted mobility" observed by Wang et al (Reports, 31 July 2020, p. 537) is the result of a known artifact. When signal intensities are changing during a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) diffusion measurement for reasons other than diffusion, the use of monotonically increasing gradient amplitudes produces erroneous diffusion coefficients. We show that no boosted molecular mobility is observed when shuffled gradient amplitudes are applied.