Coexistence of Helical Morphologies in Columnar Stacks of Star-Shaped Discotic Hydrazones

Discotic hydrazone molecules are of particular interest as they form discotic phases where the discs are rigidified by intramolecular hydrogen bonds. Here, we investigate the thermotropic behavior and solid-state organizations of three discotic hydrazone derivatives with dendritic groups attached to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013-07, Vol.135 (30), p.11075-11086
Hauptverfasser: Shu, Jie, Dudenko, Dmytro, Esmaeili, Morteza, Park, Jun Ha, Puniredd, Sreenivasa Reddy, Chang, Ji Young, Breiby, Dag Werner, Pisula, Wojciech, Hansen, Michael Ryan
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container_end_page 11086
container_issue 30
container_start_page 11075
container_title Journal of the American Chemical Society
container_volume 135
creator Shu, Jie
Dudenko, Dmytro
Esmaeili, Morteza
Park, Jun Ha
Puniredd, Sreenivasa Reddy
Chang, Ji Young
Breiby, Dag Werner
Pisula, Wojciech
Hansen, Michael Ryan
description Discotic hydrazone molecules are of particular interest as they form discotic phases where the discs are rigidified by intramolecular hydrogen bonds. Here, we investigate the thermotropic behavior and solid-state organizations of three discotic hydrazone derivatives with dendritic groups attached to their outer peripheries, containing six, eight, and ten carbons of linear alkoxy chains. On the basis of two-dimensional wide angle X-ray scattering (2DWAXS), the elevated temperature liquid crystalline (LC) phases were assigned to a hexagonal columnar (Colh) organization with nontilted hydrazone discs for all three compounds. With WAXS, advanced solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (SSNMR) techniques, and ab initio computations, the compounds with six and ten carbons of achiral alkoxy side chains were further subjected to studies at 25 °C, revealing complex crystalline phases with rigid columns and flexible side chains. This combined approach led to models of coexisting helical columnar stacking morphologies for both systems with two different tilt/pitch angles between successive hydrazone molecules. The differences in tilt/pitch angles between the two compounds illustrate that the columns with short alkoxy chains (six carbons) are more influenced by the presence of other stacks in their vicinity, while those with long side chains are less tilted due to a larger alkoxy (ten carbons) buffer zone. The formation of different packing morphologies in the crystalline phase of a columnar LC has rarely been reported so far, which suggests the possibility of complex stacking structures of similar organic LC systems, utilizing small molecules as potential materials for applications in organic electronics.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/ja4029186
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title Coexistence of Helical Morphologies in Columnar Stacks of Star-Shaped Discotic Hydrazones
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