Viologen-based supramolecular crystal gels: gelation kinetics and sensitivity to temperature.

Soft Matter

ENS de Lyon, CNRS, Laboratoire de Physique, UMR 5672, F-69342 Lyon, France.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates viologen-based supramolecular crystal gels, which are soft solid networks formed by the self-assembly of low molecular weight gelators into crystalline fibers, focusing on how to tune their properties.
  • - Researchers conducted various experiments, including spectroscopy and microscopy, to analyze the gelation process and found that viologen gelators crystallize into hollow tubes that combine into larger spherulites, following the Avrami theory of crystallization.
  • - The findings suggest that adjusting the quenching temperature impacts the size and density of spherulites but does not significantly change the gel's elasticity, indicating a trade-off between spherulite density and connectivity.

Article Abstract

Supramolecular crystal gels, a subset of molecular gels, are formed through the self-assembly of low molecular weight gelators into interconnecting crystalline fibers, creating a three-dimensional soft solid network. This study focuses on the formation and properties of viologen-based supramolecular crystalline gels. It aims to answer key questions about the tunability of network properties and the origin of these properties through in-depth analyses of the gelation kinetics triggered by thermal quenching. Experimental investigations, including UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy, rheology, microscopy and scattering measurements, contribute to a comprehensive and self-consistent understanding of the system kinetics. We confirm that viologen-based gelators crystallize by forming nanometer radius hollow tubes that assemble into micro to millimetric spherulites. We then show that crystallization follows the Avrami theory and is based on pre-existing nuclei. We also establish that the growth is interface-controlled, leading the hollow tubes to branch into spherulites with fractal structures. Finally, we demonstrate that the gel properties can be tuned depending on the quenching temperature. Lowering the temperature results in the formation of denser and smaller spherulites. In contrast, the gel's elasticity is not significantly affected by the quench temperature, leading us to hypothesize that the densification of spherulites occurs at the expense of connectivity between spherulites.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4sm00826jDOI Listing

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