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Self‐Assembly of Two‐Component Gels: Stoichiometric Control and Component Selection
Author(s) -
Hirst Andrew R.,
Miravet Juan F.,
Escuder Beatriu,
Noirez Laurence,
Castelletto Valeria,
Hamley Ian W.,
Smith David K.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.200801475
Subject(s) - component (thermodynamics) , diamine , dendrimer , materials science , ternary operation , phase (matter) , chemical engineering , polymer chemistry , chemistry , organic chemistry , computer science , physics , engineering , thermodynamics , programming language
Two‐component systems capable of self‐assembling into soft gel‐phase materials are of considerable interest due to their tunability and versatility. This paper investigates two‐component gels based on a combination of a L ‐lysine‐based dendron and a rigid diamine spacer (1,4‐diaminobenzene or 1,4‐diaminocyclohexane). The networked gelator was investigated using thermal measurements, circular dichroism, NMR spectroscopy and small angle neutron scattering (SANS) giving insight into the macroscopic properties, nanostructure and molecular‐scale organisation. Surprisingly, all of these techniques confirmed that irrespective of the molar ratio of the components employed, the “solid‐like” gel network always consisted of a 1:1 mixture of dendron/diamine. Additionally, the gel network was able to tolerate a significant excess of diamine in the “liquid‐like” phase before being disrupted. In the light of this observation, we investigated the ability of the gel network structure to evolve from mixtures of different aromatic diamines present in excess. We found that these two‐component gels assembled in a component‐selective manner, with the dendron preferentially recognising 1,4 ‐ diaminobenzene (>70 %), when similar competitor diamines (1,2‐ and 1,3‐diaminobenzene) are present. Furthermore, NMR relaxation measurements demonstrated that the gel based on 1,4‐diaminobenzene was better able to form a selective ternary complex with pyrene than the gel based on 1,4‐diaminocyclohexane, indicative of controlled and selective π–π interactions within a three‐component assembly. As such, the results in this paper demonstrate how component selection processes in two‐component gel systems can control hierarchical self‐assembly.

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