| Literature DB >> 34083780 |
Lukas Grossmann1,2, Benjamin T King3, Stefan Reichlmaier4, Nicolai Hartmann5, Johanna Rosen6, Wolfgang M Heckl1,2, Jonas Björk6, Markus Lackinger7,8.
Abstract
The use of solid supports and ultra-high vacuum conditions for the synthesis of two-dimensional polymers is attractive, as it can enable thorough characterization, often with submolecular resolution, and prevent contamination. However, most on-surface polymerizations are thermally activated, which often leads to high defect densities and relatively small domain sizes. Here, we have obtained a porous two-dimensional polymer that is ordered on the mesoscale by the two-staged topochemical photopolymerization of fluorinated anthracene triptycene (fantrip) monomers on alkane-passivated graphite surfaces under ultra-high vacuum. First, the fantrip monomers self-assemble into highly ordered monolayer structures, where all anthracene moieties adopt a suitable arrangement for photopolymerization. Irradiation with violet light then induces complete covalent crosslinking by [4+4] photocycloaddition to form a two-dimensional polymer, while fully preserving the long-range order of the self-assembled structure. The extent of the polymerization is confirmed by local infrared spectroscopy and scanning tunnelling microscopy characterization, in agreement with density functional theory calculations, which also gives mechanistic insights.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34083780 DOI: 10.1038/s41557-021-00709-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427