Literature DB >> 15641827

Solvent/gelator interactions and supramolecular structure of gel fibers in cyclic bis-urea/primary alcohol organogels.

Yeonhwan Jeong1, Kenji Hanabusa, Hiroyasu Masunaga, Isamu Akiba, Kentaro Miyoshi, Shinichi Sakurai, Kazuo Sakurai.   

Abstract

An organogel system consisting of trans-(1S,2S)-bis(ureidododecyl)cyclohexane (SS-BUC) and a series of primary alcohols was explored with optical polarizing microscopy (OPM), electron microscopy, circular dichroism (CD), wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS), and synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). OPM, SAXS, and especially WAXS showed that the gel fiber of SS-BUC/methanol gels essentially consists of SS-BUC crystal itself. SAXS showed that the SS-BUC crystal in the gel takes a lamella with a domain spacing of 5.2 nm. When we left the gel at room temperature, the spacing decreased to 3.1 nm after several months. This distance change may correspond to the structural transition from a double-layer structure to an intercalated-layer structure, which was proposed by Feringa et al. (Chem.-Eur. J. 1999, 5, 937-950) as a possible arrangement of the molecular packing. When the gels in ethanol, propanol, butanol, or octanol were examined, they never showed crystalline peaks in WAXS and SAXS, indicating the amorphous nature of the gels. With increasing the alkyl chain length from ethanol to octanol, dramatic changes were observed in the CD spectrum in the 200-500-nm range. Because these CD changes are correlated to the absorbance of urea, those can be considered as the evidence that the solvents strongly relate to the spatial arrangement between the adjacent urea groups. For the amorphous gels, the cross-sectional correlation function [gammaCu] was directly obtained by the inverse Hankel transform of the SAXS data. The value of gammaCu for the gels is decreased with increasing u (distance between the two scattering bodies, see eq 5). Furthermore, it more rapidly decreases than that of the rigid cylinder model. This feature can be explained by the speculation that many solvent molecules permeate into the SS-BUC fiber. There was a clear difference between ethanol and the other gels, indicating that the solvents with a longer alkyl chain give the more permeated and diffused fiber. This permeated fiber (i.e., wet fiber) can rationalize the dramatic CD change, by presuming that the permeated solvent molecules alter the molecular stacking form.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15641827     DOI: 10.1021/la047538t

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  3 in total

Review 1.  Challenges and breakthroughs in recent research on self-assembly.

Authors:  Katsuhiko Ariga; Jonathan P Hill; Michael V Lee; Ajayan Vinu; Richard Charvet; Somobrata Acharya
Journal:  Sci Technol Adv Mater       Date:  2008-03-13       Impact factor: 8.090

2.  Self-Assembling Oligo(2-oxazoline) Organogelators for the Encapsulation and Slow Release of Bioactive Volatiles.

Authors:  Yichao Lv; Yuanjiang Zhao; Yuhang Liu; Zhuxian Zhou; Youqing Shen; Liming Jiang
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2022-07-28

3.  Exploring the difference in xerogels and organogels through in situ observation.

Authors:  Binglian Bai; Zhiming Li; Haitao Wang; Min Li; Yukihiro Ozaki; Jue Wei
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2018-01-31       Impact factor: 2.963

  3 in total

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