4.8 Article

Self-assembly of mesoscopically ordered chromatic polydiacetylene/silica nanocomposites

Journal

NATURE
Volume 410, Issue 6831, Pages 913-917

Publisher

MACMILLAN PUBLISHERS LTD
DOI: 10.1038/35073544

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Nature abounds with intricate composite architectures composed of hard and soft materials synergistically intertwined to provide both useful functionality and mechanical integrity. Recent synthetic efforts to mimic such natural designs have focused on nanocomposites(1-5), prepared mainly by slow procedures like monomer or polymer infiltration of inorganic nanostructures(6,7) or sequential deposition(8,9). Here we report the self-assembly of conjugated polymer/silica nanocomposite films with hexagonal, cubic or lamellar mesoscopic order using polymerizable amphiphilic diacetylene molecules as both structure-directing agents and monomers. The self-assembly procedure is rapid and incorporates the organic monomers uniformly within a highly ordered, inorganic environment. Polymerization results in polydiacetylene/silica nanocomposites that are optically transparent and mechanically robust. Compared to ordered diacetylene-containing films prepared as Langmuir monolayers(10) or by Langmuir-Blodgett deposition(10), the nanostructured inorganic host alters the diacetylene polymerization behaviour, and the resulting nanocomposite exhibits unusual chromatic changes in response to thermal, mechanical and chemical stimuli. The inorganic framework serves to protect, stabilize, and orient the polymer, and to mediate its function. The nanocomposite architecture also provides sufficient mechanical integrity to enable integration into devices and microsystems.

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