Abstract

Self-assembling rigid-flexible block molecules consisting of a laterally extended aromatic segment and different lengths of hydrophilic coils were synthesized and characterized. The block molecule based on a long poly(ethylene oxide) coil (1), in the melt state, shows an unidentified columnar structure, whereas the molecule with a shorter poly(ethylene oxide) coil (2) self-organizes into an oblique columnar structure. Further decrease in the poly(ethylene oxide) coil length as in the case of 3, on heating, induces a rectangular columnar structure in addition to an oblique columnar mesophase. In diethyl ether, 1 and 2 were observed to self-assemble into uniform nanofibers with bilayer packing. Remarkably, these elementary fibers were observed to further aggregate in a lateral way to form well-defined flat ribbons (1) and twisted ribbons (2) with solvent exchange of diethyl ether into methanol. Furthermore, the ribbons formed in methanol dissociated into elementary fibers in response to the addition of aromatic guest molecules. This transformation between ribbons and single fibers in response to the addition of guest molecules is attributed to the intercalation of aromatic substrates within the rigid segments and subsequent loosening of the aromatic stacking interactions. These results demonstrate that the introduction of a laterally extended aromatic segment into an amphiphilic molecular architecture can lead to the hierarchical formation from elementary fibers of nanoribbons with a tunable twist through controlled lateral interactions between aromatic segments.

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