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Spontaneous mirror symmetry breaking in benzil-based soft crystalline, cubic liquid crystalline and isotropic liquid phases

Tino Reppe, Silvio Poppe, Xiaoqian Cai, Yu Cao, Feng Liu, Carsten Tschierske

2020Chemical Science40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Benzil (diphenylethane-1,2-dione), which is a long known example for an achiral molecule crystallizing in a chiral space group, can also show mirror symmetry breaking in the fluid state if it is suitably functionalized. For some of the new benzil derivatives even three different subsequent mirror symmetry broken soft matter states with a chiral conglomerate structure can be observed. One is an isotropic liquid, the second one a cubic liquid crystal with a complex network structure and the third is a soft crystalline solid. Chirality develops by helical self-assembly combined with dynamic network formation, thus allowing macroscopic chirality synchronization. These achiral molecules, combining a transiently chiral bent core with multiple alkyl chains, provide a unique link between the mirror symmetry breaking phenomena observed for polycatenar and bent-core mesogens. The homogeneously chiral networks are of interest for application as chiral materials, and as templates for chiral recognition, separation and enantioselective catalysis.

Topics & Concepts

BenzilBent molecular geometryIsotropyMirror symmetryCore (optical fiber)Liquid crystalChiral symmetry breakingMaterials scienceCrystallographySymmetry breakingSpontaneous symmetry breakingCondensed matter physicsChemical physicsMolecular physicsOpticsPhysicsChemistryComposite materialOrganic chemistryQuantum mechanicsCatalysisLiquid Crystal Research AdvancementsMolecular spectroscopy and chiralityPhotoreceptor and optogenetics research