Diastereoisomerism, Stability, and Morphology of Substituted meso-4-Sulfonatophenylporphyrin J-Aggregates
Author(s) -
Zoubir ElHachemi,
Joaquim Crusats,
Carlos Troyano,
Josep M. Ribó
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.8b03176
Subject(s) - tacticity , monolayer , nanoparticle , chemical physics , materials science , porphyrin , chemical engineering , ionic bonding , morphology (biology) , nanotechnology , crystallography , chemistry , composite material , organic chemistry , polymer , ion , biology , engineering , polymerization , genetics
The comparison between nanoparticle morphologies of the J-aggregates of different meso -4-sulfonatophenylporphyrins showing non-sulfonato groups at some of the meso -positions constitutes an ultimate proof of the 2D crystal-like character of the basic self-assembly motif of this family of J-aggregates. Diastereoisomerism stemming from the tacticity of the relative configurations in relation to the J-aggregate bidimensional sheet is the key factor that determines both the striking monolayer in solution and also the hierarchical pathways leading to different nanoparticle morphologies upon further growth. The unexpected stability of such large monolayered sheets made up of porphyrin units is probably caused by the support originated at both surface faces by the double layer potentials of the peripheral ionic substituents. These double layer potentials play a driving role in the subsequent 3D growth of the monolayers, as deduced herein from the determining role of tacticity both in the stability of the J-aggregate sheet and in its evolution either to monolayered or to bilayered nanoparticles. The stabilizing role of the forces at the electrical double layer of the particle suggests a relationship between these forces and the previously reported detection of racemic biases when shear hydrodynamic forces are in action during the aggregation process.
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