Litcius/Paper detail

Visible Helicity Induction and Memory in Polyallene toward Circularly Polarized Luminescence, Helicity Discrimination, and Enantiomer Separation

Lei Xu, Yong‐Jie Wu, Run‐Tan Gao, Shi‐Yi Li, Liu Na, Zong‐Quan Wu

2023Angewandte Chemie International Edition62 citationsDOI

Abstract

Inspired by biological helices (e.g., DNA), artificial helical polymers have attracted intense attention. However, precise synthesis of one-handed helices from achiral materials remains a formidable challenge. Herein, a series of achiral poly(biphenyl allene)s with controlled molar mass and low dispersity were prepared and induced into one-handed helices using chiral amines and alcohols. The induced one-handed helix was simultaneously memorized, even after the chiral inducer was removed. The switchable induction processes were visible to naked eye; the achiral polymers exhibited blue emission (irradiated at 365 nm), whereas the induced one-handed helices exhibited cyan emission with clear circularly polarized luminescence. The induced helices formed stable gels in various solvents with helicity discrimination ability: the same-handed helix gels were self-healing, whereas the gels of opposite-handed helicity were self-sorted. Moreover, the induced helices could separate enantiomers via enantioselective crystallization with high efficiency and switchable enantioselectivity.

Topics & Concepts

Helix (gastropod)HelicityLuminescenceEnantiomerCircular polarizationCrystallographyChirality (physics)ChemistryPhotochemistryMaterials scienceStereochemistryOpticsPhysicsOptoelectronicsChiral symmetry breakingParticle physicsEcologyNambu–Jona-Lasinio modelBiologyQuantum mechanicsMicrostripQuarkSnailSynthesis and Properties of Aromatic CompoundsSupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsLuminescence and Fluorescent Materials
Visible Helicity Induction and Memory in Polyallene toward Circularly Polarized Luminescence, Helicity Discrimination, and Enantiomer Separation | Litcius