A surprising
terminal-group effect on the structural and physical
properties of an amorphous polymer is reported. We recently demonstrated
that triptycene derivatives with substituents at the 1,8,13-positions
show specific self-assembly behavior, enabling the formation of a
well-defined “2D + 1D” structure based on nested hexagonal
packing of the triptycenes. Upon terminal functionalization with a
1,8-substituted triptycene (1,8-Trip), a liquid polymer, polydimethylsiloxane
(PDMS, M
n = 18–24 kDa), turned
into a highly viscous solid that exhibits birefringence at 25 °C.
Small-angle and wide-angle X-ray scattering measurements revealed
that the resulting telechelic PDMS assembles into a 2D + 1D structure,
where layers of PDMS domains, formed between 2D assemblies of the
triptycene termini, stack into a 1D multilayer structure with a layer
spacing of 18–20 nm. Because of this structuring, the complex
viscosity of the telechelic PDMS was dramatically enhanced, providing
a value 4 orders of magnitude greater than that of the original PDMS.
Remarkably, the structural and physical properties of PDMS were hardly
changed upon terminal functionalization with another regioisomer of
triptycene (1,4-Trip), which differs only in the substitution pattern.
The chemical structure of a branch point of star-shaped polymers has been considered to have small influence on the physical properties of the entire polymers. Contrary to this general notion,...
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