Abstract

Dipoles are ubiquitous, and their impacts on materials and interfaces affect many aspects of daily life. Despite their importance, dipoles remain underutilized, often because of insufficient knowledge about the structures producing them. As electrostatic analogues of magnets, electrets possess ordered electric dipoles. Here, we characterize the structural dynamics of bioinspired electret oligomers based on anthranilamide motifs. We report dynamics simulations, employing a force field that allows dynamic polarization, in a variety of solvents. The results show a linear increase in macrodipoles with oligomer length that strongly depends on solvent polarity and hydrogen-bonding (HB) propensity, as well as on the anthranilamide side chains. An increase in solvent polarity increases the dipole moments of the electret structures while decreasing the dipole effects on the moieties outside the solvation cavities. The former is due to enhancement of the Onsager reaction field and the latter to screening of the dipole-generated fields. Solvent dynamics hugely contributes to the fluctuations and magnitude of the electret dipoles. HB with the solvent weakens electret macrodipoles without breaking the intramolecular HB that maintains their extended conformation. This study provides design principles for developing a new class of organic materials with controllable electronic properties. An animated version of the TOC graphic showing a sequence of the MD trajectories of short and long molecular electrets in three solvents with different polarities is available in the HTML version of this paper.

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