| Literature DB >> 31318991 |
Artem Osypenko1, Emilie Moulin1, Odile Gavat1, Gad Fuks1, Mounir Maaloum1, Mark A J Koenis2, Wybren Jan Buma2,3, Nicolas Giuseppone1.
Abstract
Upon cooling in solution, chiral triarylamine tris-amide unimers produce organogels by stacking into helical supramolecular polymers, which subsequently bundle into larger fibers. Interestingly, circular dichroism, vibrational circular dichroism, and AFM imaging of the chiral self-assemblies revealed that monocolumnar P-helical fibrils formed upon fast cooling, whereas bundled M-superhelical fibers formed upon slow cooling. The mechanistic study of this structural bifurcation reveals the presence of a strong memory effect, reminiscent of a complex stepwise combination of primary and secondary nucleation-growth processes. These results highlight the instrumental role of sequential self-assembly processes to control supramolecular architectures of multiple hierarchical order.Entities:
Keywords: hierarchical self-assembly; organogelators; pathway complexity; supramolecular polymers
Year: 2019 PMID: 31318991 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201902898
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236