| Literature DB >> 35424813 |
Juran Noh1, Dong Geon Koo2, Chohee Hyun3, Dabin Lee2, Seohyeon Jang2, Jiho Kim4, Yejee Jeon2, Su-Young Moon5, Boknam Chae4, Inho Nam2, Tae Joo Shin3,6, Juhyun Park2.
Abstract
We assemble a film of a phosphocholine-based lipid and a crystalline conjugated polymer using hydrophobic interactions between the alkyl tails of the lipid and alkyl side chains of the polymer, and demonstrated its selective gas adsorption properties and the polymer's improved light absorption properties. We show that a strong attractive interaction between the polar lipid heads and CO2 was responsible for 6 times more CO2 being adsorbed onto the assembly than N2, and that with repeated CO2 adsorption and vacuuming procedures, the assembly structures of the lipid-polymer assembly were irreversibly changed, as demonstrated by in situ grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction during the gas adsorption and desorption. Despite the disruption of the lipid structure caused by adsorbed polar gas molecules on polar head groups, gas adsorption could promote orderly alkyl chain packing by inducing compressive strain, resulting in enhanced electron delocalization of conjugated backbones and bathochromic light absorption. The findings suggest that merging the structures of the crystalline functional polymer and lipid bilayer is a viable option for solar energy-converting systems that use conjugated polymers as a light harvester and the polar heads as CO2-capturing sites. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35424813 PMCID: PMC8984932 DOI: 10.1039/d2ra00453d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Schematic image of (a) P3HT-lipid bilayer structure for CO2 adsorption and conjugate polymer annealing effect and molecular structure of (b) lipid, D7PC and (c) P3HT.
Fig. 2DFT model for calculating the interaction between lipid (D7PC) and (a) CO2 and (b) N2 gas molecules. (c) Adsorption of N2 (black dots) and CO2 (orange dots) based on a BET analysis at 273 K for the P3HT–D7PC film.
Fig. 3Normalized FT-IR absorbance spectra in 1300 to 1000 cm−1 range of D7PC (solid line) and D7PC/P3HT film (dashed line) in air (black), vacuum (blue) and CO2 (red) condition.
Fig. 4AFM height and phase images of the (a and b) P3HT film and (c and d) P3HT–D7PC film. Contact-angle images of the (e) P3HT film and (f) P3HT–D7PC film. (g) A cross-sectional SEM image of P3HT–D7PC film.
Fig. 5GIXD 2D images of (a) P3HT film, (b) D7PC film, and (c) D7PC–P3HT film in a vacuum condition. (d) 1-D q plots and (e) qr plots of P3HT (red), D7PC (blue) and P3HT–D7PC composite (black).
Fig. 62D GIXD images of D7PC–P3HT assembly in (a) N2 and (b) CO2 purging condition and (c) q plots in a repeated vacuuming and CO2 purging. (d) Azimuthal cut profiles of alkyl chain diffraction at q ∼ 1.3 Å−1.
Fig. 7UV–vis absorbance spectra of pristine P3HT (black dotted line), the P3HT–D7PC composite film (red dotted line), CO2-treated P3HT (orange solid line), and the CO2-treated P3HT–D7PC composite film (blue solid line).