Tunable Solvent-Induced Gelation of Dipeptide-based Gelators: Exploring Role of Solvent and Acid Concentration
Abstract
The tunability of solvent-induced gelation mechanism using tert-butyl (tBu) containing solvents and two tBu-protected dipeptide precursor gelators (Boc-Phe-Phe-OtBu 1 and Boc-Leu-Phe-OtBu 2) is reported. Gelation behaviour, network morphology, material stability, and gelators' structures can be adjusted by both the solvent type and acid concentration.While tert-butyl chloroacetate (tBuClOAc) enables rapid gelation, tert-butyl methyl ether (tBuOMe), acting as a solvent with two leaving groups, promotes the in situ formation of two different gelators and prolongs the gelation time. Gel-to-Sol transition temperatures (T gel-sol ), NMR, HR-MS, ATR-FTIR and TEM analyses revealed that both solvent type and acid concentration influenced the conversion efficiency of the precursor gelators-to-gelators, as well as the secondary structure (β-sheets and helical-like motifs) and morphology of the resulting gels. This study highlights adaptability of solvent-induced gelation across different solvent environments. In addition, the findings demonstrate that the solvent type and acid loading are powerful tools for tuning the properties of peptide-based supramolecular organogels with potential applications in biomedical and materials science.
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