Open Access Article
Liwei
Yan‡
a,
Ankur
Saha‡
a,
Wei
Zhao‡§
b,
Jennifer F.
Neal
a,
Yusheng
Chen
b,
Amar H.
Flood
*b and
Heather C.
Allen
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry and Biochemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA. E-mail: allen@chemistry.ohio-state.edu; Fax: +1-614-292-1685; Tel: +1-614-292-4707
bDepartment of Chemistry, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405, USA. E-mail: aflood@indiana.edu; Fax: +1-812-855-8300; Tel: +1-812-856-3642
First published on 15th March 2022
The triggered self-assembly of surfactants into organized layers at aqueous interfaces is important for creating adaptive nanosystems and understanding selective ion extraction. While these transformations require molecular recognition, the underlying driving forces are modified by the local environment in ways that are not well understood. Herein, we investigate the role of ion binding and ion hydration using cyanosurf, which is composed of the cyanostar macrocycle, and its binding to anions that are either size-matched or mis-matched and either weakly or highly hydrated. We utilize the supra-amphiphile concept where anion binding converts cyanosurf into a charged and amphiphilic complex triggering its self-organization into monolayers at the air–water interface. Initially, cyanosurf forms aggregates at the surface of a pure water solution. When the weakly hydrated and size-matched hexafluorophosphate (PF6−) and perchlorate (ClO4−) anions are added, the macrocycles form distinct monolayer architectures. Surface-pressure isotherms reveal significant reorganization of the surface-active molecules upon anion binding while infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy show the ion-bound complexes are well ordered at the interface. Vibrational sum frequency generation spectroscopy shows the water molecules in the interfacial region are highly ordered in response to the charged monolayer of cyanosurf complexes. Consistent with the importance of recognition, we find the smaller mis-matched chloride does not trigger the transformation. However, the size-matched phosphate (H2PO4−) also does not trigger monolayer formation indicating hydration inhibits its interfacial binding. These studies reveal how anion-selective recognition and hydration both control the binding and thus the switching of a responsive molecular interface.
The self-organization of supra-amphiphiles has been programmed to respond to various recognition chemistries,27–29e.g., host–guest binding,30 electrostatics,31 and metal cation binding.32 By contrast, the use of anion binding is relatively rare despite the importance of anionic species in extraction studies12 and in the capture of other environmentally relevant anions, e.g., phosphate33 and nitrate (NO3−)34 as fertilizer, and bicarbonate (HCO3−)35,36 as carbon dioxide. The few examples of anion-triggered supra-amphiphiles leverage macrocycle-ion binding events. Anion–π interactions used by Wang37 show generation of vesicles upon binding anionic surfactants, e.g., sodium dodecylsulfate. A second set of examples by Sessler use ion-pair binding. In one case, iron difluoride (FeF2) drives formation of micelles in aqueous solution.31 Another uses receptor-modified diblock copolymers that form inverse micelles under liquid–liquid extraction conditions upon binding ion pairs of alkali cations and halides, like cesium fluoride (CsF).38 Thus, the reliable recognition chemistry of macrocycles allow the chemical specificity of the binding event underpinning the supra-amphiphile effect39 to be well defined.
To complement the role of the receptor in understanding and controlling triggered phase changes, the study of monolayers at the air–water interface also serves as a well-defined model of more complex soft-matter systems.40 For instance, monolayers often produce greater degrees of local ordering and more well-defined interfacial regions than vesicles and micelles41 or the inverse micelles in the third phase.14–16 The analysis of monolayers also benefits from a set of complementary techniques that can reveal details of the resulting interfacial phase behavior and structures. Thus, the molecule-ion binding that occurs at air–water interfaces provides a well-defined environment to help understand design principles of interfacial recognition chemistry that cannot be achieved in the study of bulk soft-matter phases.21,41,42 Pioneering works from Kunitake41,42 and recent work from our groups17–19 have also shown that the air–water interface offers a lower dielectric constant that helps enhance affinity to offset the cost of anion dehydration upon binding. To the best of our knowledge, however, the triggered assembly of supra-amphiphiles into monolayers at the air–water interface have not been studied to help deconvolute the specificity of ion binding into the competing effects of recognition and hydration.
Herein, we study the structures, selectivities, and the driving forces of the anion-triggered self-organization of a supra-amphiphile at air–water interfaces. For this purpose, we tailored a cyanostar macrocycle, called cyanosurf, to generate surfactant properties upon anion binding. Cyanostar macrocycles show strong size-dependent binding ∼1012 M−2 in organic solvents with large and charge-diffused anions, such as PF6− and ClO4−.25 Thus, we expect these hydrophobic anions to bind and trigger amphiphile formation leading to self-organization as a monolayer.25 To verify that binding is defined by the macrocycle's preprogrammed recognition properties, we compared the response to the smaller Cl− anions, which has a low affinity for the macrocycle. To evaluate the role of hydration, we examined binding of H2PO4−. While this anion binds well to cyanostar in organic solutions,43 it has a high hydration energy. Thus, we set up a competition between the two driving forces of recognition and hydration. The interfacial binding and phase formation properties were studied using surface pressure–mean molecular area isotherms, Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) imaging of the surface, infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS), and sum frequency generation spectroscopy (SFG). These studies show that the cyanosurf molecules alone form an aggregate on pure water corresponding to the initially hydrophobic character of cyanosurf. Addition of PF6− or ClO4− anions in the subphase as sodium (Na+) salts initiates cyanosurf to self-organize into a well-ordered monolayer. Interfacial anion binding produces the supra-amphiphiles with the negatively charged cyanosurf-anion complex serving as aqueous anchors for monolayer formation. Addition of the hydrophilic Cl− and H2PO4− anions does not produce interfacial complexes. These studies show how interfacial binding and triggered monolayer formation are a balance between the pre-programmed molecular recognition and the anion's hydration properties. The combination of these factors is responsible for the binding of specific ions and needs to be considered in the design of supra-amphiphiles and extraction systems alike.
To adapt this compound to supra-amphiphile formation, we incorporated three long octadecyl tails for interfacial anchoring. This target compound was made by coupling (Scheme 1) the iodo-cyanostar macrocycle, 1, with tris-alkoxy-5-ethynylbenzene, 2, under Sonogashira conditions in 45% yield according to previously reported procedures.44,45 Compound identity was confirmed using 1H, 13C{1H} NMR spectroscopy and high-resolution mass spectrometry.
000 to 8000 M−1 cm−1 with substantial peak broadening. The extent of broadening produces a flat-topped band suggesting that it might have been an artifact of the measurement. However, all the absorbance values were below 1.0. These effects are all typical of self-association.46 For this reason, the data was analyzed according to the simplest isodesmic model of self-association, so-called equal-K model47 (ESI†), and found to be consistent with a large self-association constant of over 105 M−1.
1H NMR spectroscopy (Fig. 3a) was used to provide insights into structural changes accompanying self-association. As the concentration is raised from 100 μM up another two orders of magnitude to 10 mM, the aromatic 1H NMR protons display upfield shifts indicative of π stacking.46 These shifts are seen in all the inner and outer cyanostar protons (HA, HB, HC, HD). Notably, however, the protons (HE) on the trialkoxy-substituted phenylene do not change position. This observation suggests that any association between neighboring molecules do not bring these pendant phenylenes into contact with each other. Across the same concentration range, we also observe (Fig. 3b) an increase in emission from the solution. This type of signature is often associated with the suite of phenomena broadly described as aggregation-induced emission.48 Taken together, these spectroscopies provide evidence that cyanosurf can support extensive self-association in organic chloroform solutions.
The isotherms on PF6− and ClO4− show multiple phases. Lift-off is usually associated with the onset of a liquid-expanded phase. For both PF6− and ClO4−, there also appears to be a turnover around 5 mN m−1 (150 Å2 per molecule) consistent with passing through a coexistence region containing both the liquid expanded and liquid condensed phases, and then a phase transition to the liquid condensed phase around 10 mN m−1. In the case of both anions, we see a second (∼10–20 mN m−1) and third (∼40–55 mN m−1) phase. These are usually associated with liquid-condensed phases having high and low tilting, respectively, and an intermediate coexistence region (∼20–40 mN m−1) in which both tilted phases exist. These transitions occur at slightly different pressures and MMAs for the two anions. Overall, both anions show a gradual nonlinear increase in surface pressure upon compression until a collapsed phase is produced at around 55 mN m−1 (70 Å2 per molecule). We attribute the behavior seen in the isotherm to formation of expanded and then condensed monolayers of the supra-amphiphiles.
Contrary to the significant expansion seen in the cases of PF6− and ClO4−, the Π–A isotherms of cyanosurf with 10 mM of H2PO4− or Cl− present in bulk solution show a negligible change (Fig. 4c and d). This observation suggests that the interfacial arrangement of the cyanosurf molecules is unaltered when H2PO4− and Cl− are individually present in the aqueous solution. The negligible response to chloride is consistent with the selectivity preferences of the macrocycle,25 which disfavors smaller anions. However, phosphate is a size-matched anion that displays strong binding49 in organic solutions. On that basis alone, it is expected to display similar interfacial binding as PF6− and ClO4−. However, the isotherm results indicate otherwise. To corroborate the results from the isotherm studies, aqueous surface imaging was undertaken.
In comparison, we observed neat and homogeneous film formation when cyanosurf was deposited on aqueous solutions of PF6− and ClO4−. BAM imaging shows (Fig. 5d) a homogeneous cyanosurf monolayer is formed with PF6− in the expanded region at 180 Å2 per molecule in stark contrast to bright 3D structures observed with water, phosphate, and chloride. The molecular density increases upon compression and we see increasing brightness for the neat film (Fig. 5d). We observe a similar result for cyanosurf on ClO4− solutions (Fig. 5e). Clearly, addition of PF6− and ClO4− drives 2D monolayer film organization. The only mechanism by which this occurs is for transformation of the hydrophobic macrocycle into a supra-amphiphilic complex upon anion binding (Fig. 1b). Thus, the charged complex orients into the aqueous subsurface while the alkyl chains are directed towards the air side of the aqueous interface to help with film organization.
:
1 binding stoichiometries (Fig. 6a). In the case of the cyanostar macrocycles with ClO4− and PF6−, however, they prefer 2
:
1 complexation by forming a π-stacked seam (Fig. 6b). We also know that the steric gearing between tert-butyl substituents on the π-stacked macrocycles predefines a limited number of macrocycle–macrocycle rotational angles at ∼36° (Fig. 6b) or 108° (Fig. 6c) relative to each other.52 An angle of 180° is also possible but would lead to bolaphiles with the large trialkoxy chains at opposite ends of the complex. Modelling shows that the smaller angle (36°) has the most efficient packing of space. The six alkoxy chains are better size-matched to the ∼20 Å × 8 Å footprint of the cyanosurf-anion complex of the hydrophilic group. The fact that this complex involves two macrocycles, it defines a cross-sectional area of 80 Å2 per molecule, which is the MMA value approached at higher surface pressures for PF6− and ClO4− (Fig. 4). While this MMA is also similar to the surface density of the 1
:
1 complex (Fig. 6a), the 2
:
1 complexes are favored by these anions.
The observation of larger MMAs seen initially, e.g., ∼170 Å2 per molecule at lift-off, suggest that different arrangements are possible. These include a different rotation angle (108°) with larger MMA (Fig. 6c) or tilting (Fig. 6d) could exist through the liquid-expanded phases. In the putative liquid-expanded and co-existence regions, the 2
:
1 complexes may have a range of local structures. These include mixtures of the 36° and 108° rotational complexes as well as a variation in the tilt angles. At the high-density liquid-condensed region generated under high compression (Π = 10–55 mN m−1), however, the 2
:
1 stoichiometries favored by the anion-recognition properties of cyanostar25 are likely to produce 36° rotations between the two complexed macrocycles.
:
1 supra-amphiphile complex. The IRRAS data are plotted as reflectance–absorbance (RA) spectra, which is given as RA = −log(Rc/R0), where Rc is the reflectivity of the cyanosurf surface and R0 is the reflectivity of the subphase solution, i.e., either water, PF6− or ClO4− aqueous solutions. On account of the fact that the spectra of the PF6− or ClO4− subphase solution is present in both the numerator and denominator leads to IRRAS signals being sensitive solely to the cyanosurf-bound ions. Downward peaks are observed, as expected for reflectivity studies in this optical geometry.53 There are clear vibrational signatures from perchlorate and hexafluorophosphate anions bound to the cyanosurf molecules in the monolayers. Broad peaks appear for cyanosurf-PF6− (Fig. 7a) and cyanosurf-ClO4− (Fig. 7b) at approximately 846 and 1110 cm−1, and are assigned to the hexafluorophosphate antisymmetric (νas P–F) and perchlorate asymmetric (νas Cl–O) stretching modes, respectively.54,55 The presence of these peaks supports the binding of PF6− and ClO4− to the cyanosurf molecules. Similar anion vibrational signatures for phosphate in the presence of the cyanosurf molecules are absent (ESI, Fig. S4†).
The alkyl stretching region provides useful insight into the molecular organization within the monolayer. With cyanosurf on water (black traces, Fig. 7c and d), the IRRAS spectra show two distinct albeit weak peaks at 2852 and 2920 cm−1 that are assigned to the CH2 symmetric and asymmetric stretches, respectively. When comparing these alkyl modes to those of the cyanosurf on aqueous solutions of PF6− and ClO4−, the intensities of both peaks have increased substantially and are blue shifted (Fig. 7c and d). A third peak at 2963 cm−1 also becomes more prominent for cyanosurf on PF6− and ClO4− and is assigned to the asymmetric stretch of the terminal CH3 groups. We attribute the observed changes in intensity to the transition from 3D aggregates of the cyanosurf to a monolayer of the cyanosurf-anion complex seen by BAM imaging. The increase in the IRRAS intensity of the vibrations associated with the anions and the CH modes of the alkyl chains that occur with anion complexation indicates that interfacial complexation of the anions and re-organization into a homogeneous monolayer film. For H2PO4− and Cl− solutions, we observe a substantial loss of the cyanosurf methylene signature compared to that on water (ESI†), in opposition to what is observed from cyanosurf on PF6− and ClO4− solutions. This observation is consistent with the picture of anion-triggered cyanosurf surface complexation with PF6− and ClO4− and not with the H2PO4− and Cl− anions.
As seen in the BAM imaging, cyanosurf prefers to retain an aggregated form on water and is not distributed as a homogenous monolayer. In this situation, the average spectra recorded using IRRAS is a combination of mostly the bare water surface and any of the 3D aggregated structures of cyanosurf. This averaging produces the weak signature of the hydrocarbon chains observed in the IRRAS spectra. However, in the presence of the PF6− and ClO4−, the cyanosurf molecules bind to these anions likely as a 2
:
1 sandwich complex (Fig. 6b and c) and self-organize into the monolayer (Fig. 1c). With the cyanosurf macrocycles bound to the anions on the surface, the hydrocarbon chains organize towards the air side of the interface. This anion-driven transition of the cyanosurf-aggregates (solid phase, 3D aggregates) to the cyanosurf-monolayer (amphiphilic phase) gives rise to a blue shift of the νs CH2 and νas CH2 stretching modes. The alkyl chains in the aggregated phase are seen to vibrate at lower frequencies indicating that either some or all of the chains are organized in the all-trans methylene–methylene conformations. These conformations facilitate packing and thus intermolecular interactions between the adjacent chains. Transformations from all trans to gauche are commonly observed with infrared frequency shifts.53,56 More gauche defects are consistent with higher methylene stretch frequencies (blue shift). Additional gauche defects can be accommodated in the amphiphilic monolayer when there is more space available for the chains and when organization depends less on the inter-alkyl interactions. In the monolayer arrangement, it is clear that the anion-bound complex possesses a larger footprint than its six tails alone and the resultant structure allows room for some disorder in the chains. Therefore, the charged macrocyclic headgroup of the cyanosurf complexes likely plays a larger role than the tails on ordering the monolayer.
Recent SFG studies from the surfaces of low-concentration salt solutions show that the intensity of the lower frequency OH stretch region (<3300 cm−1) corresponds to water molecules in sub-surface layers. As a consequence, the signal intensity stems from the bulk χ(3) contribution arising from an electric double layer.57–59 In this situation, the transition dipole moments of the water molecules align normal to the surface and result in an increase in the SFG intensity at ∼3200 cm−1. We do not observe any such changes in the SFG spectra upon addition of the salt at 10 mM concentration without the cyanosurf. Therefore, use of such low salt concentrations produce very little change in the organization of surface water.
SFG spectra recorded in the presence of the cyanosurf molecules show dramatic changes upon selective anion binding (Fig. 8b). First, the SFG spectra for cyanosurf on water, chloride and phosphate solutions show similar features when compared to the SFG spectra recorded without the cyanosurf (Fig. 8a). This similarity reinforces our observations that there is little interaction between the cyanosurf receptor and Cl− or H2PO4− anions.
For the liquid-expanded phase composed of the supra-amphiphilic 2
:
1 cyanosurf-anion complexes on PF6− and ClO4− aqueous solutions (Fig. 8b), however, we observe a dramatic enhancement in the intensities of “OH” stretching modes for water at ∼3150 cm−1. This enhancement is attributed to the χ(3) effect, which is also termed the χ(2) diffuse layer (χ(2)DL),60 and is associated with the alignment of water stemming from large electrostatic fields. With the addition of PF6− and ClO4−, this enhancement is more than 10 times higher when compared to all other spectra. The electrostatic field that aligns the water molecules and gives rise to the enhanced SFG signal is a result of the self-organization of the amphiphilic cyanosurf-anion complexes into charged monolayers at the surface of water. Alignment of the surface and subsurface water molecules thus removes the solution centrosymmetry allowing more water molecules to contribute to the nonlinear SFG polarization response. This behavior is consistent with reports by several groups of charged surfactant–water interfaces.61–63
The observation that hydration energies play a role is consistent with prior work revealing that positively charged receptors are key to driving interfacial phosphate binding through electrostatics-assisted hydrogen bonding.17 Clearly the neutral cyanostar macrocycle's binding energy is not able to offset the high hydration energy of the H2PO4− anion. That prior work also showed that the interfacial phosphate binding energies were enhanced on order 10 000× over bulk aqueous solution. To provide a measure of the affinity, we measured the binding of ClO4− to the monolayer. We used a MMA of 150 Å2 per molecule and fit the data to a 2
:
1 binding model to obtain a value of 1000 M−1. We cannot compare this value to aqueous solution because cyanosurf or any of its homologs are not soluble in water. The only comparison we have is to MeOH–CHCl3 solutions where affinity is as high as 1012 M−1. We attribute the fall-off in stability to the steep cost of dehydration.
Footnotes |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d2sc00986b |
| ‡ These authors contributed equally to this work. |
| § Current address: School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, 100081, China. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |