2 research outputs found
Thermoresponsive Helical Poly(phenylacetylene)s
PolyÂ(phenylacetylene)
(PPA) bearing dendritic oligoÂ(ethylene glycol) (OEG) as pendants was
synthesized, and its thermoresponsiveness and helical conformation
were investigated. Despite the steric hindrance of the bulky pendants
in the homopolymer PPA-OEG, the chirality could be efficiently transferred
from pendant alanine moieties to PPA main chain through ester linkage.
In order to examine the steric effect of pendants on chiral transformation,
a model PPA homopolymer PPA-Boc which carries less bulky moieties
was prepared for comparison. The chiroptical properties of these thermoresponsive
PPAs were further investigated by varying temperature to examine the
effects of their thermoresponsiveness. In addition, PPA copolymers
PPA-BDY bearing OEG dendron and fluorescent boradiazaindacene (BDY)
chromophore showed excellent thermoresponsive properties and interesting
fluorescence enhancement at elevated temperatures. To investigate
the rigidity effects of polymer backbone on the thermally induced
fluorescence enhancement, a nonchiral polymer carrying the same pendants
but with polymethacrylate as the backbone (PMA-OEG) was prepared.
It was found that the chiroptical and fluorescence properties of these
PPAs are dependent not only on their chemical structures but also
on the thermoresponsiveness
1,3,5-Triazine-Based Microporous Polymers with Tunable Porosities for CO<sub>2</sub> Capture and Fluorescent Sensing
The synthetic control
over pore structure remains highly desirable
for porous organic frameworks. Here, we present a competitive chemistry
strategy, i.e., a systematical regulation on Friedel–Crafts
reaction and Scholl coupling reaction through tuning the ratios of
monomers. This leads to a series of spirobifluorene-based microporous
polymers (Sbf-TMPs) with systematically tuned porosities and N content.
Unlike the existing copolymerization strategy by which the synthesized
polymers exhibit a monotonic change tendency in the porosities, our
networks demonstrate an unusually different trend where the porosity
increases first and then decreases with the increasing Ph/Cl ratios
for the monomers. This is mainly ascribed to the completion of coexisting
reaction routines and the different “internal molecular free
volumes” of the repeating units. The as-made networks feature
tunable capacities for CO<sub>2</sub> adsorption over a wide range
and attractive CO<sub>2</sub>/N<sub>2</sub> selectivities. Moreover,
these donor–acceptor type frameworks exhibit selective and
highly sensitive fluorescence-on or fluorescence-off properties toward
volatile organic compounds, which implies their great potential in
fluorescent sensors