Controlling and Exploiting Spiropyran-based Mechanochromism
dc.contributor.advisor | Craig, Stephen L | |
dc.contributor.author | Barbee, Meredith Hyatt | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2019-06-07T19:48:24Z | |
dc.date.available | 2021-05-21T08:17:11Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2019 | |
dc.department | Chemistry | |
dc.description.abstract | When mechanical force is applied to synthetic materials, polymer chains become highly strained, leading to bond scission and ultimately material failure. Over the last decade or so, work in the field of polymer mechanochemistry has coupled this tension to desired covalent chemical reactions. These functionalities, known as mechanophores, react to unveil a new molecular structure and triggering a constructive response. This strategy has been explored for a variety of purposes, including stress sensing, stress strengthening, small molecule release, catalysis, and development of soft devices. Additionally, the effect of force on a reaction coordinate, through biasing and probing reaction pathways and trapping of transition states and intermediates, has been well– studied experimentally and in theory. This work reports on understanding structure property relationships for the spiropryan mechanophore and expanding our control of mechanochromism from the single-molecule to device scale. First, we report the effect of substituents on spiropyran derivatives substituted with H, Br, or NO2 para to the breaking spirocyclic C− O bond using single molecule force spectroscopy. The force required to achieve the rate constants of ~ 10 s−1 necessary to observe transitions in the force spectroscopy experiments depends on the substituent, with the more electron withdrawing substituent requiring less force. Rate constants at 375 pN were determined for all three derivatives, and the force coupled rate dependenc eon substituent identity is well explained by a Hammett linear free energy relationship with a value of ρ = 2.9, consistent with a highly polar transition state with heterolytic, dissociative character. The methodology paves the way for further application of linear free energy relationships and physical organic methodologies to mechanochemical reactions. The development and characterization of new force probes has enabled additional, quantitative studies of force-coupled molecular behavior in polymeric materials. The relationship between strain and color change has been measured for these three spiropyran derivatives. The color appears at around the same strain and the ratio of color intensities remains constant for all three derivatives. This result was not predicted by previously reported computational work and motivates future studies of force distribution within filled silicones. On the material and device scale, we have utilized mechanochromism for soft and stretchable electronics, which are promising for a variety of applications such as wearable electronics, human− machine interfaces, and soft robotics. These devices, which are often encased in elastomeric materials, maintain or adjust their functionality during deformation, but can fail catastrophically if extended too far. Here, we report new functional composites in which stretchable electronic properties are coupled to molecular mechanochromic function, enabling at-a-glance visual cues that inform user control. These properties are realized by covalently incorporating a spiropyran mechanophore within poly(dimethylsiloxane) to indicate with a visible color change that a strain threshold has been reached. The resulting colorimetric elastomers can be molded and patterned so that, for example, the word “STOP” appears when a critical strain is reached, indicating to the user that further strain risks device failure. We also show that the strain at color onset can be programmed through the layering of silicones with different moduli into a composite. As a demonstration, we show how color onset can be tailored to indicate a when a specified frequency of a stretchable liquid metal antenna has been reached. The multi-scale combination of mechanochromism and soft electronics offers a new avenue to empower user control of strain-dependent properties for future stretchable devices. Through the study of the reaction that converts spiropyran into merocyanine, we are able to teach and connect a number of standard general chemistry course topics while also introducing students to polymer concepts. By framing a number of different concepts including molecular orbital theory, quantum mechanics, equilibrium, hydrogen bonding, mechanical work, and polymer chemistry with the same reaction, our goal is to allow students to see connections in seemingly disparate sections of general chemistry. The reactivity of a mechanically active functional group is determined by the activation energy of the reaction (ΔG‡) and the force-coupled change in length as the reaction proceeds from the ground to transition state (Δx‡). Finally, we report a combination of both principles enhances the mechanochemical reactivity of epoxides: placing alkenes adjacent to cis-epoxide mechanophores along a polymer backbone results in ring-opening to carbonyl ylides during sonication, whereas epoxides lacking an adjacent alkene do not. Upon release, tension-trapped ylides preferentially close to their trans-epoxides in accordance with the Woodward-Hoffman rules. The reactivity of carbonyl ylides is exploited to tag the activated species with spectroscopic labels for force-induced cross-linking through a reaction with pendant alcohols. Even with alkene assistance, mechanochemical reactivity remains low; single molecule force spectroscopy establishes a lower limit for ring-opening ca. 1 sec-1 at forces of ~2600 pN. | |
dc.identifier.uri | ||
dc.subject | Chemistry | |
dc.subject | Polymer chemistry | |
dc.subject | Organic chemistry | |
dc.subject | mechanochromism | |
dc.subject | polymer mechanochemistry | |
dc.subject | spiropyran | |
dc.subject | stress-responsive materials | |
dc.title | Controlling and Exploiting Spiropyran-based Mechanochromism | |
dc.type | Dissertation | |
duke.embargo.months | 23 |
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