University of Lincoln
Browse

Micrometre-long covalent organic fibres by photoinitiated chain-growth radical polymerization on an alkali-halide surface

Version 4 2024-03-12, 16:54
Version 3 2023-10-29, 13:48
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 16:54 authored by Frank Para, Frank Bocquet, Laurent Nony, Christian Loppacher, Michel Féron, Fréderic Cherioux, David Z. Gao, Filippo Federici Canova, Matthew WatkinsMatthew Watkins
<p>On-surface polymerization is a promising technique to prepare organic functional nanomaterials that are challenging to synthesize in solution, but it is typically used on metal substrates, which play a catalytic role. Previous examples on insulating surfaces have involved intermediate self-assembled structures, which face high barriers to diffusion, or annealing to higher temperatures, which generally causes rapid dewetting and desorption of the monomers. Here we report the photoinitiated radical polymerization, initiated from a two-dimensional gas phase, of a dimaleimide monomer on an insulating KCl surface. Polymer fibres up to 1??m long are formed through chain-like rather than step-like growth. Interactions between potassium cations and the dimaleimide’s oxygen atoms facilitate the propagation of the polymer fibres along a preferred axis of the substrate over long distances. Density functional theory calculations, non-contact atomic force microscopy imaging and manipulations at room temperature were used to explore the initiation and propagation processes, as well as the structure and stability of the resulting one-dimensional polymer fibres.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Mathematics and Physics (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Nature Chemistry

Volume

10

Issue

11

Pages/Article Number

1112-1117

Publisher

Nature

ISSN

1755-4330

eISSN

1755-4349

Date Submitted

2018-08-30

Date Accepted

2018-07-09

Date of First Publication

2018-08-27

Date of Final Publication

2018-11-30

Date Document First Uploaded

2018-08-28

ePrints ID

33046