The aggregation behavior in water-rich solutions of five iron(II) complexes with alkylated derivatives of 2,2'-bipyridine was studied by electron microscopy (cryo-SEM, SEM, and TEM) and AFM. The results obtained by cryo-SEM on frozen colloidal solutions show that the morphology of the aggregates strongly depends on the length of the alkyl chains in the bipyridine ligands, with shorter alkyl chains forming rod-like structures, whereas for compounds with longer alkyl chains, only spherical structures were detected. The self-aggregates were further characterized by SEM and TEM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe self-assembly of diaminododecane solubilised by four different stereoisomeric dendritic peptides to form gel-phase materials in toluene was investigated. The second generation dendritic peptides were based on D- and L-lysine building blocks, and each contained three chiral centres. By designing dendritic peptides in which the configurations of the chiral centres were modified, and applying them as gelator units, the assembly of stereoisomers could be investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper reports the tunability of a two-component gel system based on dendritic l-lysine with a focal point carboxylic acid group and aliphatic diamines. The microscopic structure and macroscopic properties of the gel can be modulated by changing the concentration of the components, altering their molecular structures, or tuning their relative molar ratio. In the latter case, there is a complete change in the morphology of the gel that has a direct impact on its macroscopic properties, specifically its gel-sol transition temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study investigates in detail the physical gelation of toluene induced by the addition of simple aliphatic diamines to a dendritic L-lysine-based peptide. The gel-phase material obtained was characterized using differential scanning calorimetry, scanning electron microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, circular dichroism, 1H NMR, and X-ray diffraction. When the length of the aliphatic diamine is incrementally increased (C6-C12), the thermally reversible gel-sol transition temperature is dramatically increased (4-105 degrees C).
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