Abstract

We report the use of Fourier transform polarization modulation infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) to characterize the influence of dimethyl methylphosphonate (DMMP) on the molecular interactions occurring within thin films of nitrile-containing liquid crystals supported on surfaces presenting metal perchlorate salts. Infrared spectra obtained using thin films of 4'-octyl-4-biphenylcarbonitrile (8CB) supported on copper(II) perchlorate salts reveal the nitrile groups of 8CB to be coordinated to the copper(II) on these surfaces, and subsequent exposure of the system to DMMP to result in the elimination of these coordinated nitrile groups. Concurrently, evidence of coordination of the phosphoryl group of DMMP with copper(II) is provided by measurement of a shift of the phosphoryl stretch from 1246 to 1198 cm(-1). In contrast, surfaces presenting nickel(II) perchlorate salts only weakly coordinate with DMMP [the phosphoryl peak shifts from 1246 to 1213 cm(-1) in the presence of nickel(II)], and exposure of 8CB to DMMP results in only partial loss of coordination of the nitrile groups of 8CB with nickel(II). These PM-IRRAS measurements and others reported in this article provide insights into the molecular origins of macroscopic ordering transitions that are observed when micrometer-thick films of nitrile-containing liquid crystals supported on copper(II) or nickel(II) perchlorate are exposed to DMMP: Upon exposure to DMMP, nematic phases of 4'-pentyl-4-biphenylcarbonitrile (5CB) supported on copper(II) perchlorate salts undergo ordering transitions, whereas 5CB supported on nickel(II) perchlorate salts do not. Our IR results support the hypothesis that these ordering transitions reflect the relative strengths of coordination interactions occurring between the 5CB, DMMP, and the metal salts at these interfaces.

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