화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.129, No.11, 3292-3301, 2007
Controlled MegaDalton assembly with locally stiff but globally flexible polyphenylene dendrimers
The divergent polyphenylene dendrimer synthesis of the largest chemically monodisperse molecules to date, up to 28 nm at 271.6 kDa for the sixth generation, is presented. Monodispersity, conformational flexibility, and an assembly behavior reminiscent of multimeric proteins for the locally stiff, macroporous dendrimers were evaluated with a combination of molecular and polymer characterization tools, namely size exclusion chromatography, atomic force microscopy, ultrahigh-mass MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, and dynamic light scattering. Remarkably, the high-precision MegaDalton assembly of shape-adaptable dendrimers occurs in the absence of electrostatic or hydrogen-bonding interactions and is the product of Lilliputian solvophobic interactions, mediated by the dendrimer arm size, shape, and stiffness. This covalent/noncovalent approach offers a general molecular shaping motif that is completely different than what has been previously accessible with conventional self-assembly.