Guest-Driven
Inflation of Self-Assembled Nanofibers
through Hollow Channel Formation
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Abstract
The
highlight of self-assembly is the reversibility of various
types of noncovalent interactions which leads to construct smart nanostructures
with switchable pores. Here, we report the spontaneous formation of
inflatable nanofibers through the formation of hollow internal channels
triggered by guest encapsulation. The molecules that form this unique
nanofibers consist of a bent-shaped aromatic segment connected by
a <i>m</i>-pyridine unit and a hydrophilic dendron at its
apex. The aromatic segments self-assemble into paired dimers which
stack on top of one another to form thin nanofibers with pyridine-functionalized
aromatic cores. Notably, the nanofibers reversibly inflate into helical
tubules through the formation of hollow cavities triggered by <i>p</i>-phenylphenol, a hydrogen-bonding guest. The reversible
inflation of the nanofibers arises from the packing rearrangements
in the aromatic cores from transoid dimers to cisoid macrocycles driven
by the reversible hydrogen-bonding interactions between the pyridine
units of the aromatic cores and the <i>p</i>-phenylphenol
guest molecules