figshare
Browse
bm3c01266_si_001.pdf (4.12 MB)

Self-Assembly of Unusually Stable Thermotropic Network Phases by Cellobiose-Based Guerbet Glycolipids

Download (4.12 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-03, 17:05 authored by Soumi Das, Caini Zheng, Timothy P. Lodge, J. Ilja Siepmann, Mahesh K. Mahanthappa, Michelle A. Calabrese, Theresa M. Reineke
Bicontinuous thermotropic liquid crystal (LC) materials, e.g., double gyroid (DG) phases, have garnered significant attention due to the potential utility of their 3D network structures in wide-ranging applications. However, the utility of these materials is significantly constrained by the lack of robust molecular design rules for shape-filling amphiphiles that spontaneously adopt the saddle curvatures required to access these useful supramolecular assemblies. Toward this aim, we synthesized anomerically pure Guerbet-type glycolipids bearing cellobiose head groups and branched alkyl tails and studied their thermotropic LC self-assembly. Using a combination of differential scanning calorimetry, polarized optical microscopy, and small-angle X-ray scattering, our studies demonstrate that Guerbet cellobiosides exhibit a strong propensity to self-assemble into DG morphologies over wide thermotropic phase windows. The stabilities of these assemblies sensitively depend on the branched alkyl tail structure and the anomeric configuration of the glycolipid in a previously unrecognized manner. Complementary molecular simulations furnish detailed insights into the observed self-assembly characteristics, thus unveiling molecular motifs that foster network phase self-assembly that will enable future designs and applications of network LC materials.

History