Abstract

Perylene tetracarboxylic acid bisimides are compounds that show intense visible light absorption and exhibit excellent chemical, photochemical and thermal stability. As such, they have been widely used as dyes and have a range of industrial applications. These dyes have also been investigated for various applications in aqueous media as chromonic liquid crystals: lyotropic systems characterised by the association of aromatic mesogenic cores into stacked structures. In this study, we focus on one perylene dye bis-(N,N-diethylaminoethyl) perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylic diimide dihydrochloride, PER, and study its self-assembly in aqueous solution through both atomistic and coarse-grained molecular models. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations demonstrate spontaneous self-assembly into chromonic H-aggregate stacks with an interparticle twist between molecules. The coarse-graining of complex chromonic mesogens introduces a wealth of subtle complexities that presents a significant challenge to overcome. Consequently, we developed coarse-grained (CG) models using both bottom-up and top-down approaches: the multiscale coarse-graining method (MS-CG) in the form of hybrid force matching (FM) and the MARTINI 3 force field, respectively. We discuss the successes/deficiencies of these approaches and introduce changes to improve upon their performance and representability. For the MARTINI 3 model, careful optimisation of parameters allows it to exactly reproduce the atomistic self-assembly behaviour including the relevant thermodynamic properties in solution. The bottom-up CG model, produced using a conventional MS-CG treatment, fails to reproduce most of the target properties, but the implementation of the potentials into a combined FM-MARTINI 3 framework allows the recovery of the correct self-assembly behaviour in solution.

Highlights

  • Perylene tetracarboxylic acid bisimides have been widely used as stable dyes in industrial applications and have received considerable attention in academic research [1]

  • A Combined Force Matching/MARTINI model In Section 3.2, we demonstrated that all the force matching (FM) CG models exhibit incorrect behaviour in aqueous solution

  • Atomistic simulations of a chromonic perylene dye demonstrate the formation of H-aggregates in water, with a free energy of association in agreement with experimental findings

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Summary

Introduction

Perylene tetracarboxylic acid bisimides have been widely used as stable dyes in industrial applications and have received considerable attention in academic research [1]. Perylene dyes and analogues have been designed and investigated for various applications in aqueous media as chromonic liquid crystals [6,7,8,9,10,11]. Chromonics are an unusual class of lyotropic liquid crystals, where aggregates are characterised by the intermolecular association of aromatic cores into stacked structures [12]. Studies on PER show that it forms stacks of H-aggregate character which organise into a chromonic nematic phase at room temperature (with a hexagonal phase at higher concentrations) [13,14]. The thermodynamics of the aggregation have been characterised for various derivatives of PER by simulation and experiment, with the effects of solvent, temperature and substituents explored [16,17,18]

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