Abstract

Dynamic helical polymers can change their helicity according to external stimuli due to the low helix-inversion barriers, while helicity stabilization for polymers is important for applications in chiral recognition or chiral separations. Here, we present a convenient methodology to stabilize dynamic helical conformations of polymers through intramolecular cross-linking. Thermoresponsive dendronized poly(phenylacetylene)s (PPAs) carrying 3-fold dendritic oligoethylene glycol pendants containing cinnamate moieties were synthesized. These polymers exhibit typical features of dynamic helical structures in different solvents, that is, racemic contracted conformations in less polar organic solvents and predominantly one-handed stretched helical conformations in highly polar solvents. This dynamic helicity can be enhanced through selective solvation by increasing the polarity of the organic solvents or simply via their thermally mediated dehydration in water. However, through photocycloaddition of the cinnamate moieties between the neighboring pendants via UV irradiation, these dendronized PPAs adopt stable helical conformations either below or above their phase transition temperatures in water, and their helical conformations can even be retained in less polar organic solvents. Spectroscopic and atomic force microscopy measurements demonstrate that photocycloaddition between the cinnamate moieties occurs on the individual molecular level, and this is found to be helpful in restraining the photodegradation of the PPA backbones. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that the spatial orientation of the pendants along the rigid polyene backbone is crucial for the photodimerization of cinnamates within one helix pitch.

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