Abstract

Supramolecular copolymers have typically been studied in the extreme cases, such as self-sorting or highly mixed copolymer systems, while the intermediate systems have been less understood. We have reported the temperature-dependent microstructure in copolymers of triazine- and benzene-derivatives based on charge-transfer interactions with a highly alternating microstructure at low temperatures. Here, we investigate the temperature-dependent copolymerization further and increase the complexity by combining triazine- and benzene-derivatives with opposite preferred helicities. In this case, intercalation of the benzene-derivative into the triazine-derivative assemblies causes a helical inversion. The inversion of the net helicity was rationalized by comparing the mismatch penalties of the individual monomers, which indicated that the benzene-derivative dictates the helical screw-sense of the supramolecular copolymers. Surprisingly, this was not reflected in further investigations of slightly modified triazine- and benzene-derivatives, thus highlighting that the outcome is a subtle balance between structural features, where small differences can be amplified due to the competitive nature of the interactions. Overall, these findings suggest that the temperature-dependent microstructure of triazine- and benzene-based supramolecular copolymers determines the copolymer helicity of the presented system in a similar way as the mixed majority-rules phenomenon.

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