Hierarchical Organization of Photoresponsive
Hydrogen-Bonded Rosettes
Posted on 2005-08-10 - 00:00
Hydrogen-bonded disk-shaped aggregates (rosettes) composed of azobenzene-appended
melamine and barbiturate or cyanurate are investigated in view of their hierarchical organization and
photoresponsive behavior by 1H NMR and UV/vis spectroscopies, dynamic light scattering, and gelation
behavior in aliphatic solvents and liquid crystalline behavior in bulk state. In the bulk state the rosette
possessing a sterically bulky tridodecyloxyphenyl substituent in the barbiturate component stacks in an
offset arrangement to form a rectangular columnar mesophase, whereas in aliphatic solvents it does not
hierarchically organize into higher-order columnar aggregates. This drawback is improved by exchanging
the barbiturate component into a more sterically nondemanding N-dodecylcyanurate component. The
resulting new rosette stacks in a face-to-face arrangement to form a hexagonal columnar mesophase in
the bulk state and hierarchically organizes into elongated fibrous aggregates in cyclohexane, which eventually
leads to the formation of organogel. Dynamic light scattering and UV−vis experiments upon UV-irradiation
of the columnar aggregates in cyclohexane revealed that the dissociation and the reformation of columnar
aggregates can be controlled by the trans−cis isomerization of the azobenzene moiety. Molecular modeling
indicates that the rosette possessing cis-azobenzene side chains loses its planarity. Using this photoinduced
morphological change of the rosette, photoresponsive organogel is created by the use of a disk-shaped
supramolecule the first time.