Single-Crystal Polycationic Polymers Obtained by Single-Crystal-to-Single-Crystal Photopolymerization

The efficient preparation of single-crystalline ionic polymers and fundamental understanding of their structure–property relationships at the molecular level remains a challenge in chemistry and materials science. Here, we describe the single-crystal structure of a highly ordered polycationic polyme...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2020-04, Vol.142 (13), p.6180-6187
Hauptverfasser: Guo, Qing-Hui, Jia, Manping, Liu, Zhichang, Qiu, Yunyan, Chen, Hongliang, Shen, Dengke, Zhang, Xuan, Tu, Qing, Ryder, Matthew R, Chen, Haoyuan, Li, Peng, Xu, Yaobin, Li, Penghao, Chen, Zhijie, Shekhawat, Gajendra S, Dravid, Vinayak P, Snurr, Randall Q, Philp, Douglas, Sue, Andrew C.-H, Farha, Omar K, Rolandi, Marco, Stoddart, J. Fraser
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The efficient preparation of single-crystalline ionic polymers and fundamental understanding of their structure–property relationships at the molecular level remains a challenge in chemistry and materials science. Here, we describe the single-crystal structure of a highly ordered polycationic polymer (polyelectrolyte) and its proton conductivity. The polyelectrolyte single crystals can be prepared on a gram-scale in quantitative yield, by taking advantage of an ultraviolet/sunlight-induced topochemical polymerization, from a tricationic monomera self-complementary building block possessing a preorganized conformation. A single-crystal-to-single-crystal photopolymerization was revealed unambiguously by in situ single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis, which was also employed to follow the progression of molecular structure from the monomer, to a partially polymerized intermediate, and, finally, to the polymer itself. Collinear polymer chains are held together tightly by multiple Coulombic interactions involving counterions to form two-dimensional lamellar sheets (1 nm in height) with sub-nanometer pores (5 Å). The polymer is extremely stable under 254 nm light irradiation and high temperature (above 500 K). The extraordinary mechanical strength and environmental stabilityin combination with its impressive proton conductivity (∼3 × 10–4 S cm–1)endow the polymer with potential applications as a robust proton-conducting material. By marrying supramolecular chemistry with macromolecular science, the outcome represents a major step toward the controlled synthesis of single-crystalline polyelectrolyte materials with perfect tacticity.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.9b13790