4 research outputs found

    Motorized Photomodulator:Making A Non-photoresponsive Supramolecular Gel Switchable by Light

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    Introducing photo-responsive molecules offers an attractive approach for remote and selective control and dynamic manipulation of material properties. However, it remains highly challenging how to use a minimal amount of photo-responsive units to optically modulate materials that are inherently inert to light irradiation. Here we show that the application of a light-driven rotary molecular motor as a "motorized photo-modulator" to endow a typical H-bond-based gel system with the ability to respond to light irradiation creating a reversible sol-gel transition. The key molecular design feature is the introduction of a minimal amount (1 mol%) of molecular motor into the supramolecular network as a photo-switchable non-covalent crosslinker. Advantage is taken of the subtle interplay of the large geometry change during photo-isomerization of the molecular motor guest and the dynamic nature of a supramolecular gel host system. As a result, a tiny amount of molecular motors is enough to switch the mechanical modulus of the entire supramolecular systems. This study proves the concept of designing photo-responsive materials with minimum use of non-covalent light-absorbing units.</p
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