| Literature DB >> 35424004 |
Reuben Bosire1, Dennis Ndaya1,2, Rajeswari M Kasi1,2.
Abstract
We describe the influence of competing self-organizing phenomena on the formation of cholesteric mesophase in liquid crystalline brush block terpolymers (LCBBTs) and liquid crystalline random brush terpolymers (LCRBTs) containing chromonic molecules. A library of LCBBTs and LCRBTs are synthesized using ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP) of norbornene side-chain functionalized monomers comprising cholesteryl mesogen (NBCh9), chromonic xanthenone (NBXan), and poly(ethylene glycol) (NBMPEG). Compression molded films of LCRBTs containing chromonic molecules display multilevel hierarchical structure in which cholesteric mesophase co-exists with π-π stacking of the chromonic mesophase along with PEG microphase segregated domains. This is unexpected as conventional LCBCPs and LCBBCs that lack chromonic molecules do not form cholesteric mesophases. The presence of π-π interactions modifies the interface at the IMDS so that both chromonic and cholesteric mesophases coexist leading to the manifestation of cholesteric phase for the first time within block architecture and is very reminiscent of previously published LCRBCs without chromonic molecules. The key to the observed hierarchical assembly in these LCBBTs containing chromonic molecules lies in the interplay of LC order, chromonic π-π stacking, PEG side chain microphase segregation, and their supramolecular cooperative motion. This unique "single component" polymer scaffold transforms our capacity to attain nanoscale hierarchies and optical properties from block architecture similar to nanoscale mesophases resulting in random architecture. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35424004 PMCID: PMC8697838 DOI: 10.1039/d1ra00899d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Schematic illustration for 1D photonic material based on cholesteric–chromonic interactions lacking long range order: (a) monomers (NBCh9, NBXan and NBMPEG), (b) synthesis of random and block terpolymers by ROMP using modified second generation Grubbs catalyst, and (c) illustration of hierarchically self-assembled 1D photonic material. (i) Photonic properties originating from Ch* mesophase (300–600 nm) from compression molded TPX75B and TPX75R films with blue and green color reflections respectively. (ii) Molecular packing for the film samples comprising hierarchical structure of MPEG domains (domain size, d = 13.2 nm), individual π–π stacking of xanthenone molecules (3.4 Å or 0.34 nm), and polymorphic smectic domains arising from cholesterol majority matrix in all samples, monolayer smectic layers (∼3.5 nm) and smectic bilayer (∼6.1 nm) as shown in Table S2.†
Polymer composition and molecular weight characterization
| Entry | Polymer description | Weight percentage |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NBCh9 | NBXan | NBPEG | |||
| TPX75B | P(NBCh9- | 75.0 | 9.7 | 15.3 | 44.8 (1.15) |
| TPX85B | P(NBCh9- | 84.9 | 9.7 | 5.4 | 41.4 (1.21) |
| TPX75R | P(NBCh9- | 75.7 | 10.0 | 14.3 | 45.7 (1.09) |
| TPX85R | P(NBCh9- | 84.5 | 11.0 | 4.5 | 50.0 (1.10) |
| *HPX100 | PNBXan | — | 100.0 | — | 23.9 (1.03) |
For purposes of consistency and clarity the terpolymers are denoted by TPX_y_B or TPX_y_R where y is the target theoretical weight percent composition of NBCh9, B denotes block copolymer and R denotes random copolymer HP = homopolymer, TP = terpolymer, X= xanthenone.
Weight percentage of each monomer in random terpolymer and copolymer samples are determined by 1HNMR integrations of the peaks at 4.6, 3.36 and 7.66 ppm corresponding to NBCh9, NBMPEG and NBXan monomers, respectively.
Determined by GPC with ELSD detector, where THF was used as eluent and polystyrene (PS) standards were used to construct a conventional calibration. *HPX is polyxanthenone homopolymer.
Fig. 2DSC curves showing first cooling trace of random and block terpolymers with PEG crystallization (Tc) glass transition (Tg) and LC mesophase transitions (T1 and T2). T2 is the LC clearing temperature and generally glass transition temperature and LC mesophase transition of terpolymers lies between 26–37 °C and 80.7–100.9 °C, respectively. A heating/cooling rate of 10 °C min−1 is used in this study.
Fig. 3WAXS pattern obtained from compression molded TPX75B and TPX25B where TPX25B has P(NBCh9-b-NBXan-b-NBPEG) with 25/60/15 by composition (wt%). The characteristic peak indicative of face to face π–π stacking appears at 0.34 nm. Inset: 2D WAXS pattern of TPX75B and TPX25B confirm preferentially oriented system.
Fig. 4Temperature resolved SAXS and corresponding first cooling cycle from DSC (a) TPX75B and (b) TPX75R from compression molded film. Both samples show co-existence of PEG microphase segregated domains (q*), smectic polymorphism (qLC1, qLC2 and qLC3; T1) between room temperature and 75 °C and transition from smectic to cholesteric mesophase transition around 75–80 °C (T2). The morphological evolutions are consistent with results obtained from DSC and PEG microphase segregation is retained even above the LC clearing temperature which is also noted here as T2.
Fig. 5Representative SEM images of TPX75B and TPX75R at different magnification scales (a) cholesteric mesophase showing fingerprint structure of TPX75B (b) spherulitic structures in TPX75R suggesting differences in hierarchical morphology of both systems. Both terpolymers indicate formation of cholesteric mesophases.
Fig. 6UV Reflectance data obtained from TPX polymer films samples compression molded at distinctive temperatures depending on the liquid crystalline transition temperatures. The transition at 371 nm is indicative of π–π stacking characteristic of chromonic mesophases, which manifests as π–π* transition in the reflection spectra.