Characterization of perylene diimide dye self-assemblies and their use as templates for the synthesis of hybrid and supermicroporous nanotubules

Rodríguez-Abreu, C; Aubery-Torres, C; Solans, C; López-Quintela, A; Tiddy, GJ

HERO ID

3559768

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2011

Language

English

PMID

21942535

HERO ID 3559768
In Press No
Year 2011
Title Characterization of perylene diimide dye self-assemblies and their use as templates for the synthesis of hybrid and supermicroporous nanotubules
Authors Rodríguez-Abreu, C; Aubery-Torres, C; Solans, C; López-Quintela, A; Tiddy, GJ
Journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Volume 3
Issue 10
Page Numbers 4133-4141
Abstract The self-organizing structures formed by a water-soluble perylene diimide dye (PDI) have been studied by several experimental techniques as potential templates for the preparation of hybrid nanomaterials. The dye forms chromonic-nematic and hexagonal liquid crystals in water. The aggregates in liquid crystals consist of one-molecule-wide stacks. From the changes in the solution proton NMR chemical shifts with concentration, it appears that adjacent molecules are twisted. There is significant broadening of the aromatic resonances at higher concentrations, arising from nonmotionally averaged dipole-dipole coupling between adjacent aromatic hydrogens. This is attributed to slow overall rotation of the aggregates in solution, suggesting that they grow up to several tens of nanometers. Dye aggregates serve as templates for the formation of silica tubules (1-5 μm length, average diameter ≈300 nm), with aligned and very thin (1-2 nm) dye nanostripes embedded in the walls. The silica tubes precipitated from solution are formed by the cooperative interaction between PDI and silica species during the sol-gel reaction. Upon calcination, silica nanotubules with supermicroporous walls are obtained. In comparison with conventional surfactant systems, the use of π-π stacked chromonic aggregates brings new possibilities for the templated fabrication of pores with sizes below the mesoporous range. Materials could find applications in photovoltaics as well as in shape selective catalysis and adsorption.
Doi 10.1021/am201016m
Pmid 21942535
Wosid WOS:000296128500047
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Journal: ACS applied materials & interfaces ISSN: 1944-8252
Is Public Yes
Language Text English