1 research outputs found
Diacetylene Mixed Langmuir Monolayers for Interfacial Polymerization
Polydiacetylene
(PDA) and its derivatives are promising materials
for applications in a vast number of fields, from organic electronics
to biosensing. PDA is obtained through polymerization of diacetylene
(DA) monomers, typically using UV irradiation. DA polymerization is
a 1–4 addition reaction with both initiation and growth steps
with topochemical control, leading to the “blue” polymer
form as primary reaction product in bulk and at interfaces. Herein,
the diacetylene monomer 10,12-pentacosadiynoic acid (DA) and the amphiphilic
cationic <i>N</i>,<i>N</i>′-dioctadecylthiapentacarbocyanine
(OTCC) have been used to build a mixed Langmuir monolayer. The presence
of OTCC imposes a monolayer supramolecular structure instead of the
typical trilayer of pure DA. Surface pressure, Brewster angle microscopy,
and UV–vis reflection spectroscopy measurements, as well as
computer simulations, have been used to assess in detail the supramolecular
structure of the DA:OTCC Langmuir monolayer. Our experimental results
indicate that the DA and OTCC molecules are sequentially arranged,
with the two OTCC alkyl chains acting as spacing diacetylene units.
Despite this configuration is expected to prevent photopolymerization
of DA, the polymerization takes place without phase segregation, thus
exclusively leading to the red polydiacetylene form. We propose a
simple model for the initial formation of the “blue”
or “red” PDA forms as a function of the relative orientation
of the DA units. The structural insights and the proposed model concerning
the supramolecular structure of the “blue” and “red”
forms of the PDA are aimed at the understanding of the relation between
the molecular and macroscopical features of PDAs