Abstract

The role of hydrogen-bonding interactions in the formation and/or stabilization of liquid crystalline phases has been recognized in recent years and significant work has been conducted. Following the first and well-established examples of liquid crystal formation through the dimerization of aromatic carboxylic acids, several classes of compounds have been prepared by the interaction of complementary molecules, the liquid crystalline behaviour of which is crucially dependent on the structure of the resulting supramolecular systems. In this review the main classes of liquid crystals prepared through hydrogen-bonding interactions are presented, with the aim of establishing, in the first place, the diversity of organic compounds that can be used as building elements in the process of liquid crystal formation. Rigid-rod anisotropic or amphiphilic-type molecules, appropriately functionalized with recognizable moieties, interact in the melt or in solution and lead to the formation of supramolecular complexes that may exhibit thermotropic liquid crystalline character. Depending on the nature, number and position of the groups able to form hydrogen bonds, a diversity of supramolecular structures, both dimeric and polymeric, have been obtained, affording in turn various liquid crystalline phases. The structure and stability of these hydrogen-bonded supramolecular complexes and their relation to the observed liquid crystalline phases are the main topics of this review.

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