The investigation of the hydrogen bond saturation effect during the dipole―dipole induced azobenzene supramolecular self-assembly

The substituent group and hydrogen bonds play important roles in supramolecular self-assembly. To exploit the influential mechanism of hydrogen bonds during the dipole-dipole induced supramolecular self-assembly, some rigid azobenzene molecules with different electronegativity and hydrogen bonding c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP 2013-12, Vol.15 (47), p.20753-20763
Hauptverfasser: Li, Linfeng, Wu, Rongliang, Guang, Shanyi, Su, Xinyan, Xu, Hongyao
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container_end_page 20763
container_issue 47
container_start_page 20753
container_title Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP
container_volume 15
creator Li, Linfeng
Wu, Rongliang
Guang, Shanyi
Su, Xinyan
Xu, Hongyao
description The substituent group and hydrogen bonds play important roles in supramolecular self-assembly. To exploit the influential mechanism of hydrogen bonds during the dipole-dipole induced supramolecular self-assembly, some rigid azobenzene molecules with different electronegativity and hydrogen bonding capabilities were identified and designed. Different regular-shaped architectures were constructed via a simple solution process under mild conditions. Both experimental results and density functional theory calculations show that weak π-π stacking interactions lead to thick and short nanocylinders, strong dipole-dipole interactions and dipole induced π-π stacking lead to long and thin nanorods, appropriate hydrogen bonds consolidate the dipole-dipole interactions and dipole induced π-π stacking, forming thin nanosheets, while excessive hydrogen bonds in azobenzene would ruin the regular-shaped structures, giving irregular and stochastic aggregates. Namely there exists a certain hydrogen bond saturation effect in generating azobenzene nanostructures driven by dipole-dipole interactions. The results indicate that the morphologies of organic materials with azobenzene structures can be effectively controlled through rational molecular design by way of introducing appropriate dipole and hydrogen bonds.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/c3cp52864b
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source Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals 2008-; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Chemistry
Dipoles
Exact sciences and technology
General and physical chemistry
title The investigation of the hydrogen bond saturation effect during the dipole―dipole induced azobenzene supramolecular self-assembly
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