Issue 7, 2023

Self-recovery of chiral microphase separation in an achiral diblock copolymer system

Abstract

Macroscopic regulation of chiral supramolecular nanostructures in liquid-crystalline block copolymers is of great significance in photonics and nanotechnology. Although fabricating helical phase structures via chiral doping and microphase separation has been widely reported, the chiral memory and self-recovery capacity of asymmetric phase structures are the major challenge and still deeply rely on the presence of chiral additives. Herein, we demonstrate the first controllable chiral microphase separation in an achiral amphiphilic block copolymer consisting of poly(ethylene oxide) and azobenzene (Azo) groups. Chirality can be transferred to the fabricated helical nanostructures by doping with chiral additives (tartaric acid, TA). After the removal of the chiral additives and then performing cross-linking, the formed helical nanostructures will completely dispense with the chiral source. The supramolecular chirality and the micron-scale phase structure can be maintained under UV irradiation and heating-cooling treatment, enabling a reversible “on–off” chiroptical switch feature. This work is expected to avoid the tedious synthesis and expensive raw materials and shows a great application prospect in chiral separation and so on.

Graphical abstract: Self-recovery of chiral microphase separation in an achiral diblock copolymer system

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
29 10 2022
Accepted
09 1 2023
First published
10 1 2023
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2023,14, 1673-1678

Self-recovery of chiral microphase separation in an achiral diblock copolymer system

T. Miao, X. Cheng, G. Zhang, Y. Wang, Z. He, Z. Wang and W. Zhang, Chem. Sci., 2023, 14, 1673 DOI: 10.1039/D2SC05975D

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