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Structural and Photophysical Templating of Conjugated Polyelectrolytes with Single-Stranded DNA
Author(s) -
Lisa Peterhans,
Eliaicolaidou,
Polydefkis Diamantis,
Elisa Alloa,
Mario Leclerc,
Mathieu Surin,
Sébastien Clément,
Ursula Röthlisberger,
Natalie Banerji,
Sophia C. Hayes
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
chemistry of materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.741
H-Index - 375
eISSN - 1520-5002
pISSN - 0897-4756
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.0c02251
Subject(s) - stacking , conjugated system , polymer , intermolecular force , chemical physics , materials science , side chain , thiophene , chromophore , cationic polymerization , static electricity , polyelectrolyte , chemistry , nanotechnology , molecule , photochemistry , polymer chemistry , organic chemistry , electrical engineering , engineering
A promising approach to influence and control the photophysical properties of conjugated polymers is directing their molecular conformation by templating. We explore here the templating effect of single-stranded DNA oligomers (ssDNAs) on cationic polythiophenes with the goal to uncover the intermolecular interactions that direct the polymer backbone conformation. We have comprehensively characterized the optical behavior and structure of the polythiophenes in conformationally distinct complexes depending on the sequence of nucleic bases and addressed the effect on the ultrafast excited-state relaxation. This, in combination with molecular dynamics simulations, allowed us a detailed atomistic-level understanding of the structure-property correlations. We find that electrostatic and other noncovalent interactions direct the assembly with the polymer, and we identify that optimal templating is achieved with (ideally 10-20) consecutive cytosine bases through numerous π-stacking interactions with the thiophene rings and side groups of the polymer, leading to a rigid assembly with ssDNA, with highly ordered chains and unique optical signatures. Our insights are an important step forward in an effective approach to structural templating and optoelectronic control of conjugated polymers and organic materials in general.

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